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D.I.KINGJR, PICTURE SALE | 


| SEVENTY-NINE PAINTINGS BRING A 


TOTAL OF $108,330. 


| Troyon’s “Driving Home the Flock” Fetches 


$17,250, the Top Price for the First 
Night of the Auction—Attendance Large 
and the Bidding Spirited—List of Sales. 
The first night’s sale of paintings from the |} 
collection of Mr. David H. King, Jr., brought | 
out an interested and appreciative assembly of | 
people that filled the main floor and most of the 
gallery of Chickering Hall last night in spite of 
‘the rigor of the weather. It is several years since | 
any collection of paintings offered for sale | 
inthis town has attracted anything like | 
the attention that has been given~to Mr. 
King’s pictures, which have been on view at the 


‘American Art Galleries in Madison square. At- 


tendance at the sale was unrestricted, and the 
interested public took advantage of the oppor- 
tunity to see how the pictures that they had ad- 
mired on exhibition found purchasers at the 
auction. Intending buyers were in all parts of 
the hall, and the auctioneer rarely had to wait 
long for a bid or between bids. Some of the most 
persistent bidding came from the gallerv. 
-Seventy-nine paintings,or half of the collection, 
were sold last night and $103,330 was realized. 
Among the paintings were a number of notabie 
onés, and one of them, Troyon’s “ Driving Home, 
the Flock,” a thoroughly characteristic and 


| worthy work of its author, brought the highest 
figure of the night. The first bid on it was 


$10,000, and advances were rapid until, at 


$17,250, the picture was bought by Julius Oehme, 


Another notable one was Mauve’s “Cattle in 
the Haarlem Meadow.” It is one of a good deal 
of vigor and spirit, with its threatening sky, 
and it was applauded, as had been the Troyon, 
as soon as the curtains were drawn back. When 


a bid was asked for, somebody murmured 
$2,000 and a louder voice said $1,000, but the 
auctioneer was not willing to make a start at so! 
low a figure. One man thereupon plucked up| 
courage to offer $100, but he was laughed at, | 
and in the temporary excitement $3,000 was) 
bid and cried, and the figures went up. readily 
for a couple of thousand dollars. 

Then the bidding was seen to be mainly be- 
tween two men,and everybody became inter- 
ested. One of the two advanced the bid by 
small amounts, finally by $25 at a time, and the 
audience seemed ‘to think that he was enjoying 
seeing his opponent, after momentary, pauses, | 
going him better by the same amount, 

** $6,650,” said the man of the small advance. 

“Will you go him once more?” said the} 
auctioneer to the ‘other bidder. ** There may | 
be luck in odd numbers.”’ 

After the moment’s pause came the answer, 
or the signalequivalent to it, **$6,675;’’ and the 
Mauve went to Mr. S. Untermeyer atthe second 
highest figure of the night’s sale. 

Between these two pictures, and making with 
them the last three of the evening, Schreyer's 
**Chevaux dana la Neiges’ was sold after spirited 
bidding to H. B. Pettes for $5,100. It is in the 
best manner of that popular painter, a wintry 
picture, with action and spirit, and without 
those melodramatic qualities of his later and 
more vulgarly popula: works. | } ; 


eee UD | 
anchiek TR fist 
ughter. © painting fina 

bev tagh did the De Ne uville, after f 


re Ks the night was a life-size, 
peril si et -nude figure, “The Bather,”’ by 
abi that was very much more lifelike 
iy than is customary in the waxen works 
Piading for is a eee idly f 
The g for vanced rap’ y from { 
did to $2,500, $3,000, $3,100, and $4,000, 
ut when it was knocked down at that figure 
he bidder said his bid was $3,500. ‘The picture 
was’ put, up again and went for $3,500 to H. 
ponies © oe sales in oe are as follows: 


a 
Bo 
be 
E 


ae ure hase Price. 
Picts - OW (Canton oe. G15 
} 2 Higasd« AOLOll ss... Cw. Clinton, . 400 
ea “said, Hennerding. 200 
| ain rime. Leroile..,...** Randolph.” S 
agent) .......65 0 
5 The Le abe sd 
Hitchcock..C. W. Clinton.. 800 } 
| 6 An Picci -Domingo ...J. V. Burton...... 825 |: 
via Gari- 
paldi, haces Pagani......N. Whitman...... 800 
| 8 Le Bateau.....l’Hermitte.,E. Blumenstiel... 200 | 
eat The wieragee™ Jacquet ..,-P. J. Cable Rae de wv 15004 
Les 
“veaux a; Daumier....S. P. Avery, Jr... 1,010 


Vetalage... 
Chasseur...... sPatailic .. ..W. H. Ketchem,, 650 


12 Study of 

| Horse *Meissonier. -L. J, Tewksbury. 800 
| 18 The Herdsman Van Marcke.L. C. Delmonico. — 800 
4A Market in 


Miao ew. aod. ks. B,J. Cable,. 22234. 975 | 
. 15 On the Seine. } Hies.)... R.P,Lounsberry. 400 
16 Entrance {0} cazin.......f, Blumenthal... 725 
|17 Téte Rouge.....Henner..... F. Hermann...... 750 } 
ie se) Ore. ... ss) PAGQUE...... R. P.Gownsberry’ +625 
ws Les levards.Béraud..... J. 8. Bates........ 700 
Coup de vonbs Knight...... J.5. Bates "00 
a Effet de Neige..Loir......... Beschaurics, 4 400 
ced apie des Trib-} Thhulow.. ..Mrs.C.AlGriscom 850 
{ 
23 Rue de Paris.. .Lépine...... Durand-Ruel..... 200 | 
y ‘oreadore...Morot...... M. Kauffman..... 950° | 
ge Hepaweae eo, Besnard...."*-Randolph ”’agt. 600 


25 Repose. 
26 Hawthorn! mitchcock. J, Ge MeOullagh.. $25 


in the Dunes. 

2% pitta Cham-  Isabey Pek G. Thomas........ 600 
28 a Festa oe ae KLE Dixon-iys.c:.s Oa 
go Gatching 

Grawfish....... Corot....... A. Blumenthal... 2,100 
se Ua 3 iN? Diaz......... Knoedler........ 4,850 
81. On the Oise....Daubigny...F. B. Jennings... 1,400 
oh ee et | Dupré tae F.B. Jennings... 1,400 
83, Tree in the! Constable..F. E. Hyde....... 850 
$4. In the ie ome As 

Patk, Windsor j Stark eee J. 8. Bache....... 75 

a 
Dy “torrent Nasmyth,.,.J. S. Bache........ 550 
86 0 a ae Dove = { Chambers... George.. 525 
saree 

ba Por i be: Lawrence..G. L. Francls..... 1,600 


Bra- 


38 © ° on un hd & 85 Reynolds...L. C. Delmonico.. 2,000 


i 
89 portraivot = 
4 
! 


Raeburn..,.Randolph (agt.). 1,600 


40. Porratt of a Opie...... vB d, Cable..,,... 1,050)) 
41. master Pett ¢ womnoy....L, & WOU... a 2,050 
42. Por ae i Russel......K. Ewing......... . | 476 
43. Nottingani Dawson....Kmoelder.......... 750 
44. Hon. Mr} Lawrence. LB. Wolf......0% 2,050 


45. een Hariow.....4.Tooth,s Sons... 1,109 
46. Portrait Of @! Gortes......0.G.McOullagh.. 750 


ad 
47%. Portrait of 
Josiah Wedg- > Reynolds..John Notman.... 1,450 


WOOd -. <.jee. 


manifestly impossible where a taste so broad 


Pata ough... Cue: L, Francis..... 4, 100 
“60 0 suai “of a Lawrence. 1B. Ji Cates 3,21, Gwen 


61. Stee of the 


DOES, Ven- Bonington. .T. B. Jennings... 675. 


.Chaplin.....B., Kauffman..... 1,000. 
63. Ln térleur! pHermitte..Mrs.C,A.Griscom 875 | 
64. A Cavalier.....Roybet......F. Herrman......  625— 
65. dene Maris........A. PYYOF. cessor 1,000 
Offermans ..S. Abenhelm..... 425 


66. Le Foot 
67. ae ee .H. Schaus........ ai 700 | 


62. hee Mors 


& Ja Leigne 
Bereall.. 
68, Taking 


Observa- 


Berne Bel) ei Aste yr . 1,025 | 
tons. aA 


| 

. lecour.. 
69. ; Susterma’n.K, Georges soe. .. 600 | 
oe 


The Duke of 
Alcantara, iis Sa 
70. At the Foun- | quiiaumet.R. G. Ford...+..++ eS 
71. An Algerian. .Simoni....... ‘Sohaus.. csi wae bay 
72. An Arabian...Simoni....... Schaus........... 460. 
"3. Suisse.. UPIIOLG, Pisses HOTuindes. s. sneered 
74. Champigny.. Soutien, Behe: wien | 
fies Pleapirny .De Neuville. SCRBUS,~ «capris es 2,100 | 


76. The Bather....BouguereauH. Linde.......... 8,500 | 
“7. Castle in the Saar ie | 
Harlem Mead- ( Mauve.......6 vitterureyoe ss 6,675 | 
OWS. Aes ae ee} 
78. Chevaux nn | 
dans la Neige. f Schreyer....H. B. Betts........ 5,100 } 
“9. Driving) Sore 
AOS has Tryon.......Julius Oehme..... Ls 


Fiock.. $5 


Total. eotee Valeiccwalvvdevisiceveveseeceeeeeaeece ae $103,830 


It is hardly fair to say that the finer Haination | 
are reserved for the second night’s sale, because > 
any distinction would be invidious in a Bey 
60° wholly interesting and so intrinsically 

ood as this. But this evening there will 

e. sold the marvellous ** Portrait of Isabi bella | 
of Austria,” by the ‘younger Pourbus; the 
** Mule. Hillsherg,” Hoppner’s lovely portrait 
the beauty and danseuse, that is graceful 
action and beautiful in color; Van der Helst 
* Burgomaster’s Wife” and the Clouet, a: re- 
markable * Portrait of Jeanne d’Albret.” as | 
Other features of the sale include some of the: 
finest early English portraits by Lawrence, Rom- | 
| ney, Reynolds,Gainsborough, and Lely that have. 
| been geen in public this many a day, for Mr. 


King collected pictures, not by names, but by! 
qualities of tone and taste. His Turner, ** Blois, | 
on the Banks of the Loire,”’ is a gem in its way, | 
a high-keyed and exquisite dream; his Van } 
Marckes and Mauves are among’ the best ex- 
amples of the art of these men that have been 
seen here. The group of Barbizon paintings are 
-of exceptional interest, true, and | intrinsically | 
, beautiful, and the. Rembrandt, * ‘Portrait of 
‘ John Asselyn, Painter,” is among the strong- |} 
est, and in color the most beautiful, of por- | 
traits extant. | 
Butto gothrough the collection by items is | 


and well balanced has directed its formation. 
It is. perhaps, enough to say that it is especially 
strong in those beautiful tonal works of the 


- early English painters and of the Dutch paint- 


_ers of poetic sentiment. The interest shown in 


“the exhibition of the collection has been mani- 


‘fested equally by connoisseur and art student. 
‘The event, in short, has been one of a decade 
in art circles, and the sale last night and. 
night is likely to demonstrate not only the state 
‘of the market, but the capabilities of art appre- 
ciation in this country. It is, therefore, an 
event of significance. 


EE atin 21H ob 


UTCH AND FLEMISH 3 
IER ARTISTIC oo a 


A 


BELONGING 


At. David b. Ting, ie 


v OF NEW YORK 


The Collection to be disposed of at Public Sale, without 
reserve, on Monday and Tuesday Evenings, 
February 17th and 18th, at eight o’clock a 


Ht Chickering thall 


? 


And on Tuesday and Wednesday Afternoons, February 
18th and 19th, at three o’clock 


Ht The Hmerican Art Galleries 


. MADISON pi SS SOUTH — 


Where the Paintings and other objects will be on Free 
from Rebruary. {ith until date 
ae sale, inclusive a ae P ; © 


Thomas E. Kirby American Art Ass 
Auctioneer 


@elichtful portrait 
$5, 000 to $10, 500. . 


atione time during the eve 

easting that fell or was ki 
the baicony railing. Re 
it crashed down between Peter 
and W. L. Elkinsof Philadelphia: noe 
| Widener’ s catalogue from his hands 
owly missing hishead. Had it syncs 
t would probably have caused a serious w 


1 yw CLL COON. 


ichty-two Paintiors Brought $169,375 


 /Westerday —- $11,100 for 
‘Portrait of John Asselyn, the Highest 
Price of the Day—Incidents of the Sale. 
_ Highty-two paintings, which with theseventy- 
‘nine sold on Monday evening, made up the 
collection of 161 which Mr. David H. King, Jr., 


Valadon® Cou see Cab agi etek eed . 
put up at auction, were sold at Chickering Hall 84, Henner’s “ Penserosa;” Knoedler..... 00 
‘Jast night and brought $169,375. This with the 85. ee ema e peel pee Voitigeure deja — : 
$103,330 for Monday exebina’ s sale makes a | 88. Detaille’s “Sketch Letters? J, ete eet 
METI: 6 A. ee Ae epee ol 0 
; total for the collection of $272,7 Joven / 87. Meissonier’s “The Doctor ifajor Gross. ai: 
Besides the paintings some appa: rugs, | mY Diave “Ny Bile Supp os te) c Naa ian 250- 
“vestments, and tapestries were sold yesterday | aM Hanes yah eo cine ra ae it George... 125 | 
afternoon at the American Art Galleries, and 00. iat ise A 3 ‘Morning on the Seine;” LC. i “ait by 
fetched $8,299, making the aggregate proceeds | Ol. Dupré's * The Windsailii* Ban doiph (apt, yah 00 
‘ofthe sales so far $281,004, and there is to be v2. oues * Fontainebleau,” MeCul- IB: 
‘another sale at the galleries this afternoon, 88. © orat’s imtérteur;” Boussod, Valadon & line 
ae ee rec oe. Will ba Risnoney 94, Van Marcke's "La Mare aw Pée?” i BlJon: me 
i hings. le aia g, the Ae ah RPE eae these tebe te rere sarewe OF i 
‘Of the especially notable paintings put up last Ave hea eee thas De Adler & era 
evening, the first that caused the spectators to bpyric i Soh are spate ae Segre eG hays 1) 725. 
express their admiration by applause was the [CAN {¢ Pinaceae reac Sees ae ne 
strong and beautiful Rembrandt, * Portrait of George. ioe pe ema aaa isdn alee 
eR? f ete ncad SANS te:”’ Schaus..... eee , i 
John Asselyn, Painter,” the bidding for which Ea ae oaies eS A brie terrae ORE abe 
‘began at $5,000, ran quickly to 7 000 and Quincey, Boston bsp wiepeqetela- 4) Mublwle @ ehale piMisteteke a Bi fs 
os iN 1. Meissonier’s * ‘fhe Grenadier; Gross Va eon 
$8,000, and then to $11,100. The Rembrandt se ICR ae 
was bought bya dealer, and the auctioneers yes Pe pares the First Empire; G. 
could not tell for whom it was destined. 108. Detaille’s “Gentiinomme de la Direc 
it will be seen that many of the buyers were 104.Diave “ Paysaie Rae ec eee kk 
déalers, some if not most of whom, it was sup- 105. ¢ orot’s * a 2 Lac;” ¥. See ne. Ca Se 
posed, were executing commissions, and itcould a Biot onde “Sue. p: yey sh fiir By 
mot be learned for: publication where some of 10%. Laver tte: ws ‘figlise de Magy;” “A. Ay 
the most interesting pictures are to go. Some 109. Daas * Noontime; » SP Avery, Jr... 
of the bidders also, as usual, used assumed 110. aio: 5 TERE oe ‘The ind of the Game;” 
names. gir. Gor, Diag Bowel, A sraney 
Lesa us ” 1%. Hive’s “Jardins de Venise:’ Hears { 
Mauve s “Crépuscule,” from the Seney col- 11%. Thautow’s “Marly Spring; P, Van Vaik-- LVR ae 
lection of 1891, aroused interest all over the ue siete bi sk andes polted Bera ees os eter aes ae4 
; ° : . Sini's * Marguerite; oH Fordérer tunnh ia eon 
hall, and the bids went up rapidly from 115. Pacint's “ihe Oid Arsenal at Constant ‘i 
$2,500 to $5,900. The same artist’s serene | ays HOD! ei Fhe Boussod. Va aon et ea S 2000 
Bs . 6. Lerolie’s ** Knd 0 e& Day;" 2 ears 
a Sanimer Day, in Holland” was wel- | 117. iusca’s “Portrait of Robert’ Price;” Mr. ) 
comed by the audience, and the picture / nae ragnolas aot piyope ng sts ete anal 58 a 
and the bidding were watched eagerly. The | “SKI A@orge oss cock sue tune geen de 1,100" 
first bid was $4,000, and the figures were in- | 119. Lawnencels: “Portrait of a Lady;” Kno weer 
ereased slowly to $5,200. When the painting 120, Cores'é “Bortralt of ‘a Lady;” Georee H. a ‘| 
: : hes sn OBA SOC CO ee ee 8 
went at that sum there were comments ex | 421. Copley’s s* Portrait of Miss Bill; Ai George. , oH 
chapged to the effect that it was worth more Wiilte soa. isu) eo eee ea ‘a 8,200 
money, | 122. variow's ‘Portrait of J. Ayton,” T. J, ‘ res 
FE STK ESTO Oe. Sa a ee petaletela pints Se nemesis ] ? 
The exquisite Turner, “ Blois, on the Banks l. of J 128. Seon A portrait ‘of “Lady Frances ° sé. 
| 4 3 f - gan 4 § Seow; akesle@e.. i... acta hae 0 
of the Loire.” was the object of great interest. stor Pl ye4, Lely’s “Duchess of: Portsmouth; ‘We oa 
The bids went up steadily from $5,000 to $9,500 | luxraham. Bristol, Comn,. vette WRB) 
and stopped short. | 12h Lene? | oe ae a‘ ona Rea 
The picture was knocked down at that price, 126. Landseer' s “The Little Actress;” Tooth aed 
) f POTD nin laie ere wicks Pra .c'eig idudllee mini aml nag eins alan es i | 
but two bidders claimed it, and it had to be put | 127. Melructcn! s “Boy Reading; Randolph 1,28 td 
upagain. The bids went up freely to $9,800, | (AB ONG) oe nav s es ae sd sen eee tapes 75 
: ’ be | 2, M le {'s ‘~O 1 os » " 
pndthe painting went to adealer to be sent to:| Ay pethheid nanie..: Canes ea Wighty 875 
i : | 129. Rembrandt’s * Portrait of vobn ‘Assel; a, 
Philadelphia. be Painter;” Looth & Sons., ie Syn ¥ * 41,100. | 
hee came Countess Charlemont and Her | 180. ae ee ot Normandie;” 6,700 | 
on” started at $5,000 and moved along easily. | ‘Avera b ir eet ny ew eh Tang nie 
181. Daubigny’s “Evening on the Oise;” L. roa 
Po 10.000, and finally to $10.700.° The Clouet | belmonico.......665 aN Bs anle sv meu re A 8,400 


Bembrandat’s | 


placed with the American Art Association to be 


The sales last evening were as follo 
‘ Hictie ock’s. ‘* The Bibel Tree;” sol 


P Liermicte: 3 ‘Faysage;” 
. Thaulow’s 
. Vibert’s ‘Le Coup de Vent; id ‘Boussod, 


Tir. Hiss 


eee ee ee ar ae ey 


“Boussod, Vala. 


don_& a +4 
“Rue Montante a. Neuviite?* ane 
W. Shuourne ets ers e oe alma : 


ANJLTIONS OF SALE 


1. The highest Bidder to be the Buyer, and if any dis- 
__-___ pute arise between two or more Bidders, the Lot so in 
____ dispute shall be immediately put up again and re-sold. 


2. The Purchasers to give their names and addresses, and 
to pay down a cash deposit, or the whole of the Purchase- 
money z/ required, in default of which the Lot or Lots so 

_ purchased to be immediately put up again and re-sold. 


ae 3. The Lots to be taken away at the Buyer’s Expense 
and Risk upon the conclusion of the Sale, and the remainder 

of the Purchase-money to be absolutely paid, or otherwise 
settled for to the satisfaction of the Auctioneer, on or before 
delivery ; in default of which the undersigned will not hold 

_ themselves responsible if the Lots be lost, stolen, damaged," 
or destroyed, but they will be left at the sole risk of the 
Purchaser. 


4. The sale of any article ts not to be set aside on account of — 
any error in the description, or imperfection. All articles are 
exposed for Public Exhibition one or more days, and are sold 
just as they are without recourse. 


5. To prevent inaccuracy in delivery and inconvenience 
in the settlement of the purchases, no Lot can, on any 
account, be removed during the sale. 


6. Upon failure to comply with the above conditions, the 
money deposited in part payment shall be forfeited ; all 
Lots uncleared within three days from conclusion of sale 
shall be re-sold by public or private Sale, without further 
notice, and the deficiency (if any) attending such re-sale 
shall be made good by the defaulter at this Sale, together 
with all charges attending the same. This Condition 1s 
without prejudice to the right of the Auctionecr to enforce 
‘the contract made at this Sale, without such re-sale, if he 
thinks fit. 


: THE AMERICAN ART ASSOCIATION, 
MANAGERS. 


Tuomas E. KirBy, 
Auctioneer. 


‘q 


ARTISTS REPRESENTED 


BEECHEY, SIR WILLIAM 
BERAUD, JEAN 
BERNE-BELLECOUR, E. 
BESNARD, PAUL ALBERT 
BoninctTon, R, P. 
BouGueEreEau, W. A. 


CAZIN, JEAN-CHARLES 
CHAMBERS, GEORGE 
CHAPLIN, CHARLES 
CLOUET, FRANCOIS 
CONSTABLE, JOHN 
Cop_ey, J. SINGLETON 
WeaROT,! fo. Ce 
CoTES, SIR FRANCIS 


Dausieny, C. F. 
DAUMIER, HENRI 
Dawson, HENRY 
Dre NEvvVILLE, A. M, 


DETAILLE, J, B. EDOUARD 


mraz, IN. Vv. 
Dominco, José 
Dork, GUSTAVE PAUL 


Drouais, H., 
DuprRE, JULES 


GAINSBOROUGH, THOMAS 
Gay, WALTER 

GREUZE, JEAN BAPTISTE 
GUIGNARD, GASTON 
GUILLAUMET, GUSTAVE 


HARLOW, GEORGE HENRY 
HENNER, J. J. 
HITCHCOCK, GEORGE 
HOLBEIN, HANs 
HOpPNER, JOHN 
Hupson, THOMAS 


IsaBEY, Louis EUGENE 


JACQUE, CHARLES EMILE 
TACOURT, fi Gi 


Knaus, LupwIc 
KNIGHT, D, RIDGEWAY 


LAFARGE, JOHN 


LAMBINET, EMILE 
LANCRET, NICOLAS 
LANDSEER, SIR EDWIN 
LAWRENCE, SIR THOMAS 
Leorr, Louis. 

LELY, SiR PETER 
LEPINE, STANISLAS 
LEROLLE, HENRY 

_ LHERMITTE, Lion A. 
Loir, Luici-— 


_ Maris, JAKosB 

MAvuvE, ANTON 
MEISSONIER, J. L. E. 
MORLAND, GEORGE 
Morot, AIME NICOLAS © 


NASMYTH, PATRICK 


OFFERMANS, T. 
OPiE, JOHN | 


PAGANI, MAINARDO 
PASINI, ALBERTO 
Poursus, Franz (the elder) 


POUREUS, FrAamzZ (the 
younger) 


Rempranpt, H. Van Ryn 
. “REYNOLDS, SIR JOSHUA ; 
‘Rico, MARTIN, 
Romney, GEORGE | 


ee 


Rusca, CHEVALIER “7. = 


SaLa-Y-Francfs, EMILIO | 


ROVBET, Fo 


/ 


RUSSELL, JOHN 


SCHREVER, ADOLPH 
Sim, F. | 

SIMONI, GUSTAVO. | 
SORBI, RAFFAEL _ = 
STARK, JAMES 
SUSTERMANN, LAMBERT ~ 


THAULOW,. PRITz See 
TROYON, CONSTANT 
TURNER, ‘J. Mo Wa 


VANDER HE st, B. 
Van GOoyYEN, J. 

Van MARCKE, EMILE 
VIBERT, J. G. 
VINCENT, GEORGE 


WILSON, RICHARD © 


i] 
- 


a 
Ler’'§ 


Ps 
" 


J . ¢ 
dyn ater Bod 3 ko: 
se AI ‘oe 


: my ‘e , 


eo Tue undersigned have volunteered to receive and attend 


to orders to purchase at this sale : 


oF Wiesrs, M. Knoedler & Co., 355 Fifth Avenue. 
: ~ Wm. Schaus (Hermann Schaus and A. W. Conover, Suc- 


cessors), 204 Fifth Avenue. 


“Messts. Cottier & Co., 144 Fifth Avenue. 
Messrs. Boussod, Valadon & Co., 303 Fifth Avenue. 
-L. Crist Delmonico, 166 Fifth Avenue. 


M. Durand-Ruel, 389 Fifth Avenue. 

S. P. Avery, Jzr., 368 Fifth Avenue. 

Messrs. Ortgies & Co., 368 Fifth Avenue. 

T, J. Blakeslee, 353 Fifth Avenue. 

Messrs. Arthur Tooth & Sons, 295 Fifth Avenue. 
A. Preyer, 329 Fifth Avenue. 

Wm. Macbeth, 237 Fifth Avenue. 

C. W. Kraushaar, 1257 Broadway. 


Messrs. Duveen Brothers, 302 Fifth Avenue. 


Messrs. Sypher & Co., 246 Fifth Avenue. 


FIRST NIGHT’S SALE 


MONDAY, FEBRUARY I7TH 


= 


AT CHICKERING HALL 


[BEGINNING PROMPTLY AT EIGHT 0’CLOCE:. 


GAY 


iW 


— 


ie i : 


0p AO Gon 


Signed at the left and dated 1887 : 


3 eS Ho The S culptor — 


— 
Cae 
i ; 


Height, 17 inches. 


LELOIR 

ae (L.) 
i ° . ’ A 
_ 2—Fiiriation Ay ar Oe 
2 : ‘ SP) ate. % , ae i ‘ 

Signed at the left 7, hoe Y 

1a ‘ae Height, 16} inches. Width, 12 inches 

x 5 : From the Carvallo Collection 


Width, 13 inches 


cca AA AEE RES 


ae r 


—— 


LAMBINET 


* Dar) (E.) 
3—Landscape 
Signed at the left 
Height, 10 inches. Length, 16 inches 
VERO Mier 
(I.) 
ae 4—Harvest Time l¢ 
Rl és ‘ 
7 Signed at the right 
ie Height, 20 inches. Width, 25 inches 
Ke 
HiTCHCOGK 
(G.) 
eS 
[ 5— The Dunes at Egmond on Zee 
ha a » 
et Signed at the left and dated 1890 
wer 
Height, 10} inches. Length, 18 inches 


DOMINGO 


(F.) \ 


6—An Observer WA { ce 


Signed at the right 
Height, rr inches. Width, 8} inches 


From the M, Feral Collection 


PAGANI 


(M.) 


7—Via Garibaldi, Venice 


(Water Color) 


Signed at the right 


Height, roinches. Length, 154+ inches. 


| in SN A i 


(L A.) i ‘e 
ad 
: AA 
8—Le Bateau Rn ger 
Signed at the left 2s: PP as 
s * galt : Height, 13} inches. Length, 174 inches 


em iPr 


JacQuET 2) Y Se 


(J. G.) 


9— The Toilet 


Signed at the right 


Height 9 inches Length, 63 inches. 


DAUMIER 
(H.) 


yo Toes Curmeaye: 9 Ceiglage a. 


Signed ‘at the right 


Height, 9 inches. Width, r2 inches 


DETAILLE 
(i BoB 


a ie 


| i" vA i 


ge—C hasseur An rh 


Signed at the left and dated 1885 t: # if, ; { b 
Pa ei 


2 {5 
By, wie . jj ‘ 
ee a, vl i Height, 134 inches. i, zo inches 


Height, 13} inches. Width, 8 inches 


From the Meissonier sale, Paris, 1893 


Height, 134 inches. Width, 1o inches 


4 


| From the Collection of George I, Seney, 1891 


eal 


PASINI 
(A) 


Height, 18 inches. Width, 12 inches 


‘ 


RIGO: nt ‘ 


Pek! . +15—On the Seine near Poissy 
\ a. , Ginedetieieht : 
| Height, 114 inches. Le 
| CAZIN= 38 
| G. Co 
16—Entrance to the Village 
Signed at the right | ae | a Wy 
Height, 15 inches. 
ey 2 EON ere 


17— Téte rouge 


Signed at the right 


Height, 17 inche 


Signed at the left 


. 


ras ‘ ~ 


ie io ‘ Sara ce Height, 173 inches. Width, 144 inches 


; ~ 
ue fi 


ies Boulevards eee ee 76° 


te Signed at the left 


Ses ; A eZ 
Ari Zs 


Height, r5t inches. Length, 22 inches 


| KNIGHT 

Bere (D. R.) "4 ie 
, ee Coup de Vent ler ¥ i Oo 
‘ee < Na , Oe 


of 
+, a 
, 


; Signed at the right : #S 


(1 O% 


Height, 2t inches, Width, 17 inches 


Sys! 


asa ee goes PRE OE 
eae nal 


LOIR 11636 
(L.) 


i 


Fi oa “A 
21—Fffet de Neige ;\. > Aan 


Signed at the right 


Height, 25 inches, Width, 17 inches 


THAULOW 
(F.) 


“ 


$a PRRR iets 
f €. #2 
x! | % é E ‘ 
. af g) 


22—Rue des Tribunaux eo i A 


Signed at the right and dated 1895 
Height, 24 inches, Width, 20 inches. 


Salon Champ de Mars, 1895 


LEPINE 
(S.) 


23—Rue de Parts ~ N Dav 5 
<i ee aot 
" \ WY ee ———— 
Signed at the left \* pe one a 
<. Height, 15 inches. Length, ‘ : 
“ f cn 


_24—Il Toreadore 


Signed at the right and dated 1886 


THOT, 


Height, 184 inches. 


BESNARD 


(P. A.) 


) } GP» re i 4 
25— Repose el ea } 
(Pastel) ; 


acted ibis 


Signed at the upper right and dated 1895 . 


Height, 20 inches. 


EuLPCR COCK 
(G.) 


26—Hawtborn in the Dunes |. ¢ 
Yee | 


(Pastel) i) 
Signed at the left and dated 1890 


Height, 18 inches, 


a 
3 e. 
wf i 3 s 
- £ 
yom 
{> A J 
Ve ¢ ae 


Width, 13 inches 


ao 


y~ 
‘6 
- hi 


Length, 24 inches 


ee D 
Km ¥ Orr 
wl’ + fe 
hel fy # 
y , on 
4) he 
; ial 
an 


Length, 24 inches ¥ 


ISABEY 


(Li BS | ki 
ro ; s #2} Cc 
( a 


27—Festin Champétre 


Signed at the right 


Height, 8} inches. Length, 34 inches 


ISABEY 


ise 


28—Festin Champéire 


(Companion to No, 27) 


Height, 84inches. Length, 34 inches 


& ft ‘ J . 
% tN #5. ; ; 


aw 


We er “39—Caiching Crawjish , f Spy a I 5 & 


Signed at the left Bi a i / 


oe Nibogg* 
aie 


aa os signe 7 the As 


Height, 20 inches. Width, 15 inches 


We eG 


DUPRE 


(J.) eit 
- 32—-Paysage et Animaux 


- Signed at the left 


* 


Height, 13¢ inches, Length, see inches 


ee 


2 


9426) - 
¥ CONSTABLE 


SF ad 
16¥) ie 33— Tree in the Meadow 
Ay | 
| \ A spe eae Height, 124 inches, Length, 17 inches: 
ny \ ee 
\ 


A ~f- eee ia 4 | 
a oe J y if Ny : ‘ai 


eG ake a 
hance iH 
»/ —In the Home Rark, Windsor 
i 34 war, Lapis 
Height, 93 inches. Width, 12 inches: 


From the Collection of Marquise Santwise 


vig NASMYTH 


” i (P.) 


x {VN 35—Mountain Torrent, North Wales 


Signed at the left and dated 1824 We I; 


Height, 12 inches. Width, 14 inches 


From the Collection of Henry Brand, London 


; a 
le 
| 
ie 


Height, 25 inches. Length, 30 inches 


\ 


ee LAWRENCE 


[a (Sir T.) 


ines 24 inches. Width, 20 inches xy) 
he Be i ae 
Purchased from the Braham Family i b () 


=. “REYNOLDS 
(Sir J.) 


438—Countess Hynford — 


vy ‘i Painted in 1757 
eight, 30 inches, Width, 25 inches 


ed by J. McArdell 


i eS: p60 
} 


es FO SBS 


+ RAEBURN 
\ of” (Sir H.) i bo D aan 


39—Portratt of Mrs. Tomlinson 


rieight, 30 inches. Width, 25 inches. 


OF rales 


/030 


40—Portrait of a Lady \ »- 
A : i ' ie, Height, 30 inches. Width, 25 inches: 
a Lo A. g 
gr 


Presented by Lady Hamilton to her Sriend Mary Ginnel 


ROMNEY 


(G.) 


41—Master ‘Pemberton y d — 0 


Height, 30 inches. Width, 25 “AL 
From the Collection. of M. Allard, Paris ye 


of Sir George Beaumont 


| Signed at the left and dated 1831 


Height, 30 inches. Width, 25 inches 


: LAWRENCE a 
. : CBrGiric.) yw | | 


—Hon. Mrs Vansitart 


4 Base), Height, 22} inches. Width, 19 inches | 


i From the Collection of the Duke of Argyle : 


3 §Fbo 
r | HARLOW | 


) ® 
Bean 4, (G. HL.) 


oY. Beak 4/00 
PR ~*~  45—Portrait of a Lady Vise oN 


Height, 36 inches. Width, 28 inches 


from the Collection of Humphry Ward, London 


ie 


wv’ COTES 


See (Sir F.) 


f ¥ wad 


| 46—Portrait of Lady Stanhope / oi y 


~ Height, 30 inches. Width, 25 inches 


f 
eo 


REYNOLDS 
C oI) 


47—Portrait of Josiah Wedgwood / i 50 


ao~ oo : 4 ee 
Painted in 1782 } Y Ds : 


Height, 30 inches. Width, 25 inches 


pate A) $e 


Ae err 


ee e ee) 


ss ae Smithson wit 


Height, 30 Pottee ae 25 inches 


420° 


ROMNEY oo * 


| ( ) 5 MO 
z AA A ay | uF i , 
Pn, ir Muek Smithson . ’ } | 


Height, 30inches. Width, 25 inches 


BE Boe to ~ 
r OU 


WILSON _C. 
) 
| by oo 


c\ 


A> 
sOr— Tivoli | 


Height, 27 inches. Length, 35 inches arr yi A i 
, | | 


? b0° : 4A 


, ae’) 
: e h 4 LF 
he 52—Portrait of Mes. Arnold 


LEUUG O 
iN 
Me VINCENT bso 


51— The Stepping Stones at Thorp, Norwich 


Height, 31 inches. Length, 38 incies 


y 2 
a 


EY REYNOLDS 
oa Poe) |e 


UGog- 


Palated eth ys 


Height, 30 inches. Width, 25 inches 


ie LELY 
. \ ae (Sir P.) 
Se ibs : U 


a y: : 3-Lord Temple . i 
i \ 


.p- N 
j Height, soinches. Width, 40i ; D 
See ¥y 
From the Collection of Hon. the Earl of Granville, K.G. 


a ‘4 in) ee 
Fe Bane ie 
i PN ean fal ah 
Lk ee ev” 7 

, i v 


te a 
LELY fo" pr 507k 
Os. 


(Sir P.) 


fi ott fr t ) py mi 
i | aa Fay i af 


54—Lady Frances Knowles (Uy Vv UA 


Height, 50inches. Width, 40 inches. 


pre i 
rN 4 


pe eCHEY 
Ce 


o 


Se 
\2 


y, Ce 
MAT Kw . 
ay br” 340! 


Height, 50inches. Width, 40 inches: 


tS ? 
é ae ed 
4, 0° 


7) 
/ 


55—Portrai 


4, 


HUDSON 


56—Portratt of a Lady | Lao hee ‘ 


Height, 30inches. Width, 25 inches 


from the Collection of Humphry Ward, London — 
ar 


DOK 
‘ alae 
GREUZE 
(J. B.) , /09o 


\ q , / f| 
—Bacchante OL ee 
<4 y) OF 


Height, 22 inches. Width, 18} inches 


ae? 
/, | Oy / 

é F \A 

SSE ARO, 


SG 


Me be SCI 


p> JJ.) pk 7 ao 


58—La Jiminez 


Height, 25 inches. Width, 184 inches 


GAINSBOROUGH 
wk /} 00: 


wl t | ( tN i 
By Marsham 


Height, 22 inches. Width, 164 inches 


LAWRENCE 


(Sir T.) lb 1S 


Height, 14 inches. Width, 14 inches 


6o— Sid of a Head 


4.  BONINGTON 
a (R. P.) 3 
t 0 
61—Palace of the Doge) Venice’ 


\\ : “Heian, 134 inches. Length, ah? a 4 c 
\o~ fi \ 
From the T. Wood aneho iar ice ‘White Collections, Londo 'y 


CHAPLIN Se en 
(C.) 


62—L’dge dor 


Signed at the left 


Height, 18} inches. Width, 12% inches 


| LHERMITTE 


(L. A.) \v 

Pill wa ) g 
: : jAU Loy » | 

pes ie A , = fous? 

63—I/niérieur Bréton To ees Niel. ee 


+ 
Te) 
Signed at the left and dated 1892 as wy | 


a= 
: 


Height, 17 inches. Length, 21 inches 


prey pny ‘ ‘ t 
\ Qe wo. fy ee p 
SOD Be) yee Leg s Br 1S; hal ») At \ lt Ne 
Lor, “ et woe 


SROVRBEL 


(F.) 


64—A Cavalier Bin 


Signed at the right 


Height, 23 inches. - Width, 15 inches 


» a q s | A 
Bi i La w ag A Ade Pri Dash re 
. FN le 5 du Lorn : 
, wag Anny % 
‘wet 


o She 
| 
| 


bo 1/3 5am 


MARIS 
J.) 


65—Ploughing in Holiand / O¢05 


Signed at the right 


Height, 20 inches. Length, 32 inches 


OFFERMANS 
(T.) 


Yas. 


66—Le Pécheur a la Ligne 


Signed at the right 


Height, 27 inches, Width, 19 inches 


GUIGNARD 


(G.) 


a, 
he 
G d at the left’ »“* iV, 
Naiing, 


ithe & * J 
Yo Height, 23 inches. Length, 3r} inches 


From the Salon, Paris, 1893 


BERNE-BELLECOUR 
(E.) 


/ | \- | ow 
68— Taking an Observation VA" Ne Re ager 2s! 
ese 


Signed at the right 


Height, 19 inches. Length, 36 inches 


PO? Te Pe Ont 0 
‘ : 
| 


Yeni 


‘SUSTERMANN | , »¥° eo 


(L.) hes oa 


69— Tbe Duke of Alcantara 


ff Height, 35 inches. Width, 27 inches 


b (yO. (J 4 
LU AK . —_— # v2 


GUICPAUMET 4 :, F 


(G.) 
70—At the Fountain | [ WA LL 6! 
Signed at the right 


Height, 404 inches. Width, 29 inches 


From M. Barre Collection 


- 


SIMONI en 
(G) 


SIMONI 
Ng. (G.) 
“4 a’ 


dn Arabian 


‘Signed at the left and dated 1893 


7 


tA. Signed at the left 


P ; 
; Py 


Height, 54 inches. Length, 72 inches 


a, ei ee 
Sel ft 


wid” 
> >a 


DETAILLE ol aes 
4 por Toe 


(J. B. E.) 


u—Champie y eo. 


(Water Color) y | | gr. 
Yni h0- 
| ( 


Height, 56 inches. Length, 69 inches 


md dated 1881 


Companion Subject to No. 75 by A. M. De Neuville 


IDE NEUVILLE Qo Fi 


f— he re a 
(A. M.) (V0 gg 
pul : gee: ~~ ab = 
75—Champigny / * lu ote Ee | 
(Water Color) AV G “od te 8 
ater Color ie | 


# 
Signed at the right and dated 1882 
Height, 56 inches, Length, 69 inches 


Companion Subject to No. 74 by /, B. E. Detaille 


BOUGUEREAU 


(Ww. A.) 


76— The Bather Ga yO! 


Signed at the right and dated 1894 


Height, 6r inches. Width, 34 inches 


Lxhibited at the Royal Academy, 1895 


, MAUVE _ V4 S08- 


Bee OP 55s ae oN 


A LK VY a f -_ 
tis a ; Pa A - 
ib - : ? 
x « 


Pare in the Haarlem m Mevidows 


L ry a 
eg at eas Lippe di 


te ; Height, 294 inches. Length, 43 inches 


ne | ea , be a Varn 
| Se Gh i weal “SCH REYER fo : 


IA)6 ty | (A) ‘ Plog 
Y\  )—-78—Chevaux dans la Neige — se ; 


Signed at the right 


Height, 32 inches. Length, 52 inches 


TROYON 


o a 


79—Driving Home the Flock” ae) ee 


df | Signed at the. ett las it A 52 D 
| | be. 


| ; Height, 33} inches. Length, 50 inches 
: il 


Painted forsthd Srom the Collection of, Lord Ashburton 


SECOND NIGHT’S SALE 


TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18TH 


me oICKERING HALL 


BEGINNING PRQMPTLY AT EIGHT O’CLOCK 


HITCHCOCK 


x > ; . ’ : f : u 


80—The Willow Tree 


P) o ee 
: 
Signed at the left and dated 1890 Sh | ol 2) 


Height, 11 inches. Length, 18 inches 


PLO E RMIT IE 


(L. A.) 
81—Paysage VY Meee 8 ae 
j ’ (IV ; a” a Nach 


Signed at the right a | seein 
nf rAdaches, Length, 20 inches Panes i” 
X ¥ \ i he 


fo oe ~~ 
us THAULOW Se ap 


(F.) 


82——Rue Montante a Neuville 3 a o A 


Signed at the left 


Height, 30inches. Width, 20 inches: 


VIBERT 
(J. G.) 


255 
83—Le Coup de Vent 


Signed at the left 


Height, 144 inches. Width, rz inches 


HENNER 
J.J.) } S60 
ee 
Lop 


84—‘Penserosa { 
i SG: 
j ; 4 
Signed at the left 


Height, 24 inches. Width, 18 inches 


| bd é 
‘DETAILLE nw 


— tS 


85—Sapeurs des Voltigeure de la grde 


—— er Colo G? Al VJ ust 
yeaa ze 


Signed at the agnt and dated 1892 


Height, rof inches. Length, 27} inches 


DETAILLE hee 
(J. B, E.) 


86—Sketch Letters 
Signed at the right é ff / | 


Height, 7inches. Width, 44 inches 


MEISSONIER noe 


ond eee) 


87—The Doctor Major OQ + 
Signed at the right 
Height; 44 inches. Width, 3} inches 


From the Meissonier Sale, Paris, 1893 


sore om sy Be 


AS | 
7h DIAZ 


2) eae, eee ROY) 4 


y | ? ey eee >, \ : | ; 
” \88—Nympb and Dog ry iF cat 
o % wn 
GRD Signed at the left ~ 
nd me : 
4 ~ Height, 13 inches, Width, 9% inches: 


ol aan 


89— Trouville 


Signed at the right 


Height, 12 inches. Length, 234 inches: 


a! 
90—Morning on the Seine | ee 
. ; y, H 4. 
f 


a 
Signed at the right and dated 1857 4 f Se {) 
j F i epee 4 
fr A NADS Height, 114 inches, Length, 19 inches 


¥ 


wr 


91— The Windmill ates | pr 


an eet” | 


. < ‘ Fat, ee a a 
3 Yj / f / f “q, | Prirmgast ’ pas F 
Signed at the right Ve" 3 dtm te § Pa od 
Height, 17 inches, Width, 13 inches 


ox a fia 
a gy ™% : 
if, ‘es ( ) se 
nell oh ( ; ~~ 
/ al 
f 


7 

, 

‘ 1 * \S 7 
es N 


a", 
i 
f 


92—Fontainebleau 


pee 


; a ™~. mi Ay 
Signed at the left ) m1 7 | fagred 
f 7 


Height, ro} inches. Length, 13¢ inches 


From the Hecht Collection 


93—/ntérieur eee eee 
Signed at the left ‘ / 


Height, 18 inches. Length, 213 inches * 


Exhibition of One Hundred Masterpieces in Paris, 1883 
4 > » 2 f S aa 

fr fi Pt @ ‘aie 
fi tla 
f | 


a 


if 


{/ to 
VAN = Jy - 


2 94—La Mare au fée ae Af See 


\ Signed at the right 


v Height, 15 inches. Length, 23 inches 
‘ost i . . 
1G 50. 
ee TROYON : 
95—Dindons \_X 
WH 
\ 


Signed at the lef 


Height, 14 inches. Width, ro inches 


From the Collection of Marquise de Lavalette 


96—Harvest Field 4 * 
7 H ao 
Signed at the right my 


K, 
Jj 


Tiegh tsinches. Length, 174 inches 


_ BESNARD | Vy nf 


aNPRAY “Aliens 


97—Meditation 


Signed at the left . Si as 


Fitight, 24 inches. Width, tg inches 


a; CF ‘5 OF 


HITCHCOCK | 
° 32: 
98—The Promised Land?  ) » Tie ee : 


Signed at the left and dated 1890 


Height, 134 inches, Length, 184 inches 


bane 
jae : 


KNAUS 


(L.) ro 
NY) vay 
af | jes 
aot 
dj fh 4 a 
— tig ae er a Yared 1809, % - i () / U/ . 


ne RT 13 inches. Width, ro inches ; 4) 


ont the- Collection of George I, Seney, 1891 4 es 


vy 


f) Nd 
A V4 


‘e 


LA 
“ 


Hog 


J: L. BE.) 


100—Homme a’ Arme ae 
(Drawing) a ee Sie * a 


Signed at the right F hae Pye 


| ; K 


Height, rr} inches. Width, 


- ty t 1 
; . ALLS 
Inscribed as follows - ae 8 
'y e eat 
eG . eg iat bps 
5 ‘Mon CHER DE BEAUMONT, POET bata) 
““ Voici votre chevalier. Fera-t’il votre affaire pour votre livre? Si oui tant 
; peor hy 
mieux, si non j’en ferai un autre. oe : Pat ieee 
« A-vous, < 


‘“E, MEISSONIER.” 


7) MEISSONIEE 
ae 


(3 LB ea 


rors The Gronddier (4 


Signed at the left Ww : ; +4 ‘ 


ae 


. Height, 12 inches. Length, 15$ inches ' % 


From the Collection of M. Moreau, Paris ein 


i \< DETAI t 
| ~ (J. B-B,) 


~/  — 102—During the First Empire i 
& 


Signed at the right and dated 1888 © 
ee 3 


a ) - Height, 8 inches. Width, 6 inches’ 


DETAILLE 


s ‘ . ow _ d 
(J. B: E.) DONO 
oa 


-103—Gentilbomme de la Directoire  ) 


Signed at the left 


Height, 8 inches, Width, 43 inches: 


| n 
104—Paysage 7 os 


| Rs) A Oe 
Signed at the left Lif \pe™ 
, F Nes 


Height, 8inches. Length, 11$ inches: 


ve (? \e a = a) 
(J. B. €.) | rh vimow 
105—Le Lac : | ~ > £ oe 
ap Bove. 
eo” NM 
Signed at the left 


R 


» 
‘| 
4 


~ 


106—Marine 3 v2 OA 
Signed at the left 


Height, 15 inches. Length, 18 inches 


TROYON 


eae | C) | | 00. 


v* 
107—Sheep 
Signed at the left 


Height, 13 inches. Length, 16 inches 


Fron the sale of the Artist's effects after his death 


LHERMITTE 


(L. A.) 


108—Figlise de Magy ‘Ser oy meee 
Signed at the right y f X\ Kf 


i 
Height, 93 inches. “Length, 13 inches 


109—Noontime (oP 1 y Mn % wa 


A. pet os eae RS ea 
Signed at the right a { is Fi ais 
\) \vy 
Height, 22 inches. Width, 18 inches 


SALA-Y-FRANCES 


ie /20¢ 


110—The End of the Game 


Signed at the right and dated 1879 


Height, 16 inches. Length, 24 inches 


from the Collection of George I, Seney, 1891 SS SX 


Pee coca 4 


(R.) + | 
: fi { $s /) , 4] C 
111—Playing Bowls ) i ee 


Signed at the left and dated 1893 


Height, 15 inches. Length, 25 inches 


PY ae di 
PAK EO OLA te Lae, 
fl 112—Jardins de Venise Bb | 


Signed at the, Bie 


Gg f THAULOW 
rtheenbuaa i 


PP ARNETTE MDI TIN eC MIP EHiaa tog LGR Bs IN a 


st 4s JA 


fi fo 


113—Early Spring fu 
War 


Signed at the left and dated 1895 


my Ae 


Height, 35 inches. 


SIMI 
(F.) 


SO al 114— Marguerite 
A 


Signed at the upper right 


Height, 39 inches, 


fiji” yr 
Ve Pe 284 inches. 


Width, 184 inches 


Width, 27 inches 


Width, 27 inches 


PASINI 


(A.) 


LEROLLE at 


? aed ’ O66) 


116—End of the Daj 


7 gl 
Signed at the left g AKO a) 33 
Height, 564 inches. Length, 39 inches 
RUSCA ‘ 
(Chevalier) 3 By is are sg ' 
\e f) Ne ’ 
te fj’ $s 
k Fern - wt) f 
117—Portrait of Robert Price BD eS re 
Oe vil ; 


¥ a £ ~~, 
' Height, 30inches. Width, 25 inches ~\ ) S b 
\/4 


From the Price Family 


Poied 


35600 


REYNOLDS 


Ke (Sir J.) // 00 


II 8—> Portrait of. Mrs. Musters : 
Painted in 1782 


Height, 30 inches. Width, 25 inches. 


LAWRENCE 
(Sir T.) 


3 b . 


a Lady 


Height, 30 inches. Width, 25 inches 


from the Collection of the Earl of Mainnearing, London 


COTES 
120—Portrait of a Lady 


min 
QA? 


‘ome Height, 30 inches. ‘Width, 25 inches 


f\ \s fi d 
. Of 
g 
eee 5 Beige 
we «+ an f. AS “A 
ov fe j ma 4 2 ( . 
Cy f : \p~ ‘4 cate 
121—Portratt of Miss Hill — er iid eee e e 
3 2 b 0 7 Height, i inches. Width, 25 inches ; as ) os 
From the Viscount Hill Collection, London a “VY - . 
(25 
dee 
HARLOW ae 
(G. H.) (2 sh 
gohond Maayft 


122—Portrait of ]. Ayton 


SY ‘ a Height, 30inches. Width, 25 inches 


/ i lee of ae Frances Scott yA 
4 | ey oe Cn 


* Painted in7hg) kt a v 
\ v ) pA iz \ Height, 30 inches. Width, 25 inches 
a 
R, FY 
ie 


oa 


LELY tN 
(Sir P.) 
j .f 


a Al | J & ig 
es a de fi al a 4? 

3 fer po th MAT ES 8 

\ A , 4 

eight, 30 inches, Width, 25 inches 


a Gs 


LIE TD CS Pre 


ee 


Se Reseda 


(Sir 1h ) 


a 


Height, 22 inches. 


2 


LANDSEER 


(Sir E.) 


126—T he Little Actress 


Portrait of the daughter of the Duke of Bedford. 


Height, 21 inches. Width, 13 inches — 


Munition of Old Masters, Royal Academy, London, ree Eng graved — r 
by C. Rolls atk 


REYNOLDS: 


at Gir J.) 


Portrait of the model for the celebrated picture, ‘‘ Mercury as a Pickpocket.” 


- MORLAND 
Sees 


r 


Height, ot inches. Length, 11} inches o uM, , 


From the Collection of Henry Brand, Esg,, London yf 4 


REMBRANDT 


(Van Ryn) 


s 


fe 


129—Portrait of Jobn Asselyn, Painter 


“John Asselyn, painter of landscapes and battles, contemporary and friend of 


idea Rembrandt, who died in 1650, won ae le eer the reputation of a clever and 


bere ‘refined artist. The greater part of his ‘worl in which the influence of Claude 


Lorraine is at times strongly felt, is fmade up of pictures of Italian subjects which 


ually treatec Spt: f people and animals. 
: a view of the Tiber by this artist, which 


The museum of 


bes ductions, and formerly ornamented, in the Hotel 


Baie i - dsconsidered one oft 


Lambert, a room c e Cabinet des Amours. The museums of London, 


; Munich, Amsterdam,vetc., all have pictures by Asselyn. There is to beseen at 
j ’ yi 


Amsterdam a composition which is unique in his production, a life-size swan 


defending its nest against a carnivorous animal. Hondekoeter might well have 


~ signed this fine composition. A little known phase of the talent of Asselyn was Oi 


his cleverness in painting in blue cameo or faience. He did much work for the Nae 
potters of Delft in this line. The portrait before us is the first of Asselyn which A 
Rembrandt etched, catalogued by Bartsch as number 277, and of which the cabinet ee 


of prints of the National Library at Paris possesses a superb proof.” 


Oval canvas. Height, 304 inches. Width, 244 inches, 


& 


: Lol 
BANE 
from the Collection of M. Gavet, Parts a Gry 
a) f Bis 
Oe alin Valag 


red 


Height. 17 inches. Length, 25 inches: one 


From the Collection of George Z. Seney, New York, 1891 


+ 


6 ~ . DAUBIGNY | 


we ; (C. F.) 


131—Evening on the Oise 


af : 
hy ve Digned at the right and dated B74 


, 13 inches. Length, 22 inches 


» J 
a 


f 
Vy \ fo 


I 32—Rentrée dans \Cabane, p a 
Ves iN 


| we " 
Signed at the) sh anal ive 


Height, 13 inches. Length, 20 nches 


Senet at the right 


a ah tl alge een 26inch2s. Wiith, 18 inches yh ae 


oi os : . From the Collection of George I. Seney, og 5 9 QO os ; 


i ; 


ey 


COROT 
(j,.B.C.) 


a 134-—Chemin borde de Saules, 
Signed at ie right 


x 


DAUBIGNY 


(GF 


_ Signed at the left and dated 1873 


Ya 


Height, 114 inches. Length, 194 inches 


Deb ioeeh 3. from the Collection of George I. Seney, 1891 


aK | tee ee 


d35— aye 


Signed at t é right and dated 1863 _ 


Height, 17} inches, Width, gt inches. a : 


* ¥ 


JACQUE 


iC- £4 


13 7—Sheep Pasture 


Signed a soy ee eget g e Bere Net 
; t “Height, 253 inches. Length, 32inchess 


from the Collection of MM. Foignard, Paris 


MAUVE 
(A.) 


} 2 Mh N yy 138—A Summer Day in Holland, 


iy 1 "Signed at the right 


Height, 36 inches. Length, 51 inches 


IJo0. | 
CONSTABLE ae : 


139—Hampstead Heath 


Height, 20 inches. Length, 27 inches 


From the Collection of W. Dyer, E'sq., London 


TURNER : 


(J. M..W.) 3 On Pee 


pa. * ¢ } 
Pe Bhis| on th agi) aft ihe Lotre ' ne 
ate) 
GY oi O O° Height, 20 inches. oot Cree 


oe guy ) 
—- «STARK 4 


Ci . 
J.) on | — 
141—View Near Norwich ae : a hai 
J ] O 6 Height, 18 inches. Length, 24 inches ‘ ‘ 


oteeay 


e VAN GOYEN yt Tae 
- ff Pe i / : ae 
( iy PA a . Ww ah Pil 
ae oe 


/ 
142—Duztch River poate 
7s 


oy]? 


Height, 16 inches. Length, 21 inches 


HOLBEIN | 


(H.) 


> Height, 13 inches, Width, 8 inches 


The original drawing in the Private Collection of H. M. Queen Victoria 


Sarath, sien tee 


aa | 

io ath POURBUS.- {The Bide 
 9M%c> es 

\ a ; y 

O -144—Margaret of Valois, First Wife of Henry IV 


i ie “Margaret of Valois, sister of Charles IX., who was born at Saint-Germain- 

| en-Laye on May 14, 1553, was one of the prettiest and most sfzrzfwed/e women of = 
) ee - her day. Pourbus’s work permits the appreciation of her beauty, and preserves, as 

well, the reflection of her wit. What it cannot tell is that the princess cultivated © 


“ty a , Pat her naturally happy tendencies, and that she loved the company of poets, littéra- 
Cone teurs, philosophers, and artists. Brought up in a dissolute court, she was not 
i nt able to escape the contagion of example, but in the midst of her gayeties she 


gave evidence at times of rare grandeur of soul and loyalty. 

‘*Married to Henry of Navarre on the eve of the Massacre of Saint Bartholo- 
mew, she was to the husband whom she did not love, and who did nothing to make 
Hi. her love him, if not a devoted wife, at least a consort of irreproachable probity. 
Ha. 7 ‘*Pclitics made the marriage; politics caused its sundering. Margaret, who 
had refused to consent to her divorce when Henry IV. wished to marry Gabrielle 
a d’Estrées, bowed to the royal will when it was matter of a marriage with Marie 
de Médicis. 

. “While in retirementin a fortress at Usson,in Auvergne, where she knew how 
to enliven her stay, she wrote her memoirs, ‘a work of distinction and fimecse,’ as 
said Sainte-Beuve, which is one of the most elegant productions of French liter- 
i ature of the sixteenth century. 

““Margaret died in Paris, March 27, 1615, in a palace she had built, and on 


& which site the Ecole des Beaux Arts now stands.” - 


i ae ne : 7 


a Height, 264 inches. Width, 22 inches 


r From the Collection of M. Gavet, Paris 


_REYN OLDS 
(Sir J. ve 


ROMNEY 
(G.) 


ys | 146—Portrat of Mrs. Angerstein — (AV 


de Height, 30 inches. With 25 inches 


ahaa England 


GAINSBOROUGH 
= (ia 


From the Collection of Gainsborough Dupont, mentioned in Fulcher’s 


Life, and exhibited at the Gainsiorough Exhibition, London 


ie 
a LELY eee 


bs a? ”) i a | (Sir P.) SAN ; 
i e hay Franklin 3 | a 


zt ‘eel : ee 
i i” a A 30 inches, Width, 25 inches | “ 


a 


Lie cap e 
\ % & 
: / 
wee 


ae +REYNOLDS 

‘aaa $5 (Sir J.) 

ae y_-449—Portrait of Mrs. Angelo “a Sor 
cS it . > ne | | 


a4 (vy a Painted in 1760. | } a 2, 
es , | : Height, 30 inches. Width, 25 inches oe 


From the Collection of James Price, London. Exhibited at the Exhibi- 
tion of Old Masters, Royal Academy, London, 1877 


ska, daughter of the then dethroned Jing Stanislas of Poland, in 1725 took her seat. 


on the throne of France. 


‘Hers was a sweet and passive nature, better fitted fora bourgeois life than for 


the excited existence of courts. So we do not see her mixed in any of the political 


intrigues of her husband’s reign, and she appears to us turning her eyes modestly 


away from all the excesses of the titne, and confining herself, not without a certain 


proud dignity, to her vdZe of wife and mother. 


‘“ Asa wife one knows what she must hcve suffered ; asa mother she was sorely : 


tried also. Of the ten children she bore the king, seven preceded her to the tomb. 


Sad and resigned, she died in 1768. 


‘*Marie Leczinska had just ascended the throne when Drouais made the 


bewitching portrait of her we see before us. Besides the grace of the young queen, 


this painting reproduced and revived her most personal tastes—the love of a 


| coquettish and becoming dress; her weli-known passion for jewels, a passion 
Be pe which blinds her so that she loads her graceiul 1aeck with a heavy necklace ; and, 
finally, and this a very characteristic trait, there are seen on her those fur orna- 
ments which she liked to be the only one at Court to wear, and did not give up 
even in the mildest seasons.” 


sss Oval canvas. Height, 37 inches. Width, 26 inches 


payne? 
Se ray 


2 From the Collection of M. Gavet, Paris 
q4o 
m°) 


Misr 
s 
¥ 
g 


a 
< 


i 


é 


BONINGTON 
(RP) 


Lr’ on Die 
15 51 — Honfleur thedral — Bh care 35 


a > 


wy dare, (+ Nady : 
By O O EK ten i Height, 36 inches, Length, 45} inches. 
Rl pi 


) 


130°” 


po 


&, 1 be y f 
pd ae 


MORLAND 
(G.) ye he. 


152—/ be Shiparch ‘ ys 5 d 
id 
Signed i in a fo 
: ‘ee Height, 39 inches. Length, 57 inches: 


From the Collection of Alexander Denniston, London 


‘ Ae 0 Foams oe 
REYNOUDY, fv >: 
f a SS : AV ¢ 
phe ) \ Wt of f\) A oh i P) 
i¢ fs f f y : ox fp 
bee 
153—The Duke of Dootisbire Oe a OT 
; ame > \ % : ~ 
Painted in 1758 A b j¥ ) i * ‘) ) /\ 


Height, soinches. Width, 40 inches 


from the Henry Graves Collection, London, Engraved by R. Josey 


Bae got ye 
Sotie ae 154—Countess Charlemont and ber Son 


Height, 50 inches. ‘Width, 40 in uae “9 : 


LExhibited at the Royal Academy, 1812 


ie 
2 ROMNEY 


ab NV (G.) 


15 s—Portrait ERY oa fee, & 


nor ny eidbt, 59 eet eee. 40 inches nat 


from the Collection of Colonel Honeywood, London a, : 


Bree 


REYNOLDS 


Ripa" (Sir J.) 13 pe batt en 
SVE LE ee 


Ph. 


156—Lord Rothes 


r p» Painted in 1768 
HW : 4] , j yi a ‘ , , 
Hb), af : ‘ \ Height, 50 inches. Width, goinches 


From the Hewett Collection, London 


tl eA pS ee ee ee ee ee ee 
_" ik ay | ag & od Pea 3 , 


e of the noblest and purest figures of the sixteenth 


Ri. century, was born in ‘Paris, on January 7, 1528. She was the daughter of Henri 
d@’Albret and of Marguerite de Valois, sister of Francis I. 

2 Handsome and sfzrztuelle, eloquent aiso, and endowed with a good and up- 
: right understanding, she married, at the ageof twenty, Antoine de Bourbon, Duke 
of Vendome ; and in 1553, at the Castle of Pau, singing a Bearnese refrain, gave 
birth to the child who afterwards became Henry IV., King of France. 
| ** A convert to Calvinism from 1556, she was benevolent to her co-reiigionists, N* 
without oppressing the Catholics. Personally supervising the education of her son, re 

; es whom she adored, she worked to make him the champion of the new faith, and was : 

able to develop in him the germ of all the qualities of which he gave evidence 
later. es 

‘* Drawn to the Court of Fiethice at the time of the projected marriage between 


her son and the sister of Charles IX., she died there, on June 10, 1572, poisoned, it 


& _ is said, by order of Catherine de Médicis. 

** The portrait we now look on was painted shortly before the birth of Henry IV. 
‘probably during a stay that Clouet, painter to the king, made at the Castle of 
Pau in 1552.” 


Height, 27 inches. Width, 22} inches 


from the Collection of M, Gavet, Paris 


Height, 45 inches. Width, 32 nll 


| i 
\$0 oe 


Collection of Wynne Roberts, Esq., Brookhall, Tetenhall, Cheshire 


-HOPPNER © 
J) 


Height, “a inch a 


‘ 


from the Exhibition of Fair Women, Grafton Gallery, London, 1894, x. . 
qe -" | ; i 1s 
** Tust then Mr. Hoppner strolled up and begged me to give him my opinion ee. 

the beauty, as well as of the dancing, of a talland hondsome young woman whom I 


saw on the dais. ‘It is Mdlle. Hillsberg,’ he whispered, ‘and I may say” ae my 
portrait of her is, in my own opinion, the best thing I ever did.” 


sp — 


succeeded in making apparent in this portrait, both in the expressionof the face / or, / 


BRET RTOS AE 


ye, 


POURBUS (The Younger) 


(F.) fe 


161—Portratt of Isabella of Austria ~~ S00 


“Tsabella, daughter of Philippe II., King of Spain, and grand-daug 


Charles V., was born in 1566, and from her earliest youth displayed that firmness J 
of character of which she gave later so many proofs, and which the painter has / ’ a tf i, ") 
; f a } f ee 


and the grave simplicity of the pose. 


“It was Isabella whom, onthedeath of Henry III., Philippe I1. tried to place 


on the throne of France, and she it was whom, in 15098, on his death-bed, he still 


called ‘the light and the mirror of his eyes.’ 


‘She had married, the year previous, the Archduke Albert, King of the Low 


Countries. She found part of his statesin revolt against the Spanish dominion, and 
she strongly opposed the rebels. To pay her troops she sold her jewels, includ- 
ing perhaps the necklace we see on her neck, and she was present at the siege of 
Ostend, which lasted over three years. After the death of Albert, which took place 
in 1621, she continued to rule his dominions with wisdom, and was skilful enough 
to pit herself against Cardinal Richelieu and cause the failure of the project he 
cherished of turning the Low Countries into an independent republic. She died 
in 1633. 


“Isabella was twenty-three years of age when she posed for this picture.” 
Height, 53 inches. Width, 414 inches 


From the Collection of M. Gavet, Paris 


mai! 


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a a: 
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4 

2 

4 

4 

ai 

gia 
ha. 
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J ey “at 


S 
Vas 


CU YL 
ie “és Yd. 


Empress of Austria. 
é \ 
\y Pourbus,; (the Younger.} 


N 


FibU bee MeeesG UUs ITU Ole 


‘his choice new dwelling is offered for sale on 
'y easy terms at a low figure; also an ‘inside 
ise. as 


OLDING & WHITEHOUSE, 


ind asterly bank of the 
eel Now 6 rise paek ae ne ‘bour 
Ses “NO; G; thence across the mou 


; yuae pci1dyvez thence northe Py ene sy } 
etly along the « northeasterty"” a 


Rasen re ate pea 
rable heads h St. "| 30S. & and 1 to the easterly line o: 
9 Pine St., and Sih Va Corwen Sei Bt | 1; thence along the easterly, line of 
JCLTIONEER, ' AGENT. 4, : southerly be} ‘feet; thence sou 


. REAL ESTATE, 
9 PINE ST. AND 1 MADISON AV, 
ROKER, — ee APPRAISER. 


i 54 minutes 30 seconds we 
feet; thence south @ Miecroed® 2) minut 


Parcel No, 1, south $0 degrees 63 4 in 
seconds west 59 fee;; thence ‘couth aT 4 
84. minutes 30 seconds west 160.10 feet; 
South 75 degrees 10 “minutes ¢ secon 
167.70 feet to a corner; thence still al 
boundary of Parcel] No, 1, leaving it anc 
ing the highway leading easterly from 
Bridge, south 6 degrees 9° minutes 30 
Cast 611.90 feet ‘to the southerly side 
highway, thence still along the ae 


TIMES UP-TOWN OFFICE, 


269 Broadway. 824 Street. 


Open daily from 5 A. M. to 9 P. M. 


| Brooklyn Real Estate for Sale. 


ON NNN NNN NPR RL ND Na SRN PRN OPN NNN RN IP 
MR-SALE—The elegant steam-heated apartment 
touse, leased to ten responsible tenants, will | 
sold at a sacrifice for cash, to net 15 per cent. . 
‘ome or more. 71 Pineapple St., opposite St. 
orge Hotel; owner on premises. 


of said hixhway, south 77 degrees 21 1 

West 230.60 feet to the ’ southeasterly 

formed by the aforesaid. highway and + 
highway leading Southerly from the. firs 4 
highway; thence across the aforesaid H. 
South 79 degrees 15 minutes 80 ‘secon 3 
48.13 feet to the northwesterly corner for, 
the aforesaid two highways, which point is a 
northeasterly .corner of Parcel No. 16; 
along the westerly side of the second afa: 
highway which is the’ easterly boundary | 
cel No. ‘16, south 8 degrees - 25° minutes 
‘| 126.40 feet; thence south 6 degrees 40 mi 
| 80 seconds east’ 215.70 feet to. the nor 
bank. of a mill pond on Cross river; 

northerly and westerly along the northerly. 
of said mill pond as it winds and turns, 
the southerly boundaried of Parcels Nos.” 

14 and 11 to the westerly side of a dam 
Cross river; then along the said side of 
dam to the centre of Cross river; thence ¢ 


q 
3oth houses have fine views of Hudson, ex- 4 €! Y and northerly along said centre of. 


isive grounds, cared for at owner’s expense, and | © et alle Redes No, Z Rare | ie 
‘e use of stables; seven minutes’ walk of sta- | SOUtherly boundary ‘o arce 0, nort 
a Sos ; de srecs z6 minutes 30 peconts west foe | 

as : erly bank o ross river; thence north - 82 
\pply to JAMES R. HAY, 7 Wall St. grees 2u minutes 30 seconds west. Sn 
Ss : 3 thence sou : egrees 59 minutes west 2: 
PU R NUTLEY, N. J., OFFERS SEVERAL Essar ° Rds 
Woden houses, with pleasant grounds, shade, 354.80 pein cds south a0 Seeeceee 
‘> at rentals $450 ito $900; quite near station. t ete. eee 


4g 4 80 seconds west 202.40 feet; thence SOME 
ply, .F. M. UNGER, opposite Nutley Station, _ degrees 53 minutes west $1.45 feet; th 


; south ap aeerebs ek Brent ee 
aia ‘| thence still-a ong the boundary o arcel 
Real Estate for xchange. 7; fnence across a road or highway lea 


westerly from .the aforesaid highway lea 

cnetariy from Wood's Bridge; Seis a ain 

*R. EXCHANGE.—The elegant steam heated | the ‘ oundary of Parcel No. 7 nort minu 
oe “yievers house, 71 Pincinpie St., opposite ; west 275.12 feet to the easterly bank of \ 
- George Hotel; all leased to good, responsible | Croton river; thence still along the bounda 
fants;; will be sold ata sacrifice for cash, or\] Of Parcel No. 7 and the easterly hank of t 
ll exchange for unencumbered property. J, W, | Croton -river as it winds and turns, te BA 
MILTON, owner, on premises, mately the following courses and distance: 
—————————E—EE— EE | North 74 de ‘es 19 minutes 80 seconds east + 
arp “th, 54 degrees 12. minntar. es 


Country ‘Real Estate for Sale. 
_ -Irvington-on-Hudson, — 


fodern house, 12 rooms, newly decorated; rent, 
0. : oi 3 


. 


Md-fashioned Colonial house, 14 rooms, newly 
nodeled; Sanitary plumbing; all modern im- 
yvements, (new,) $750. 


AAA A 


rare 


» 


i / lee Bric-a-Brac, Fabrics, 


Rugs, Consoles, Mirrors, 


and Furniture 


NOON'S SALE. 


er es FEBRUARY 18TH 


3 as 


THE AMERICAN ART GALLERIES 


BEGINNING PROMPTLY AT THREE O'CLOCK 


. 


BRIC-A-BRAC 


>162—Pair. PiLGrRim BOTTLES. 


Gien faience ; decorated with red and yellow 


“on eine blue ground. 


Sate youd , ~ 
‘ 


Se uch porcelain ; cupid with snowball flowers ; : 
decorated in colors and gold, | 


Fe ice Cup AND SAUCER. | 
ae _. Landscape view in panel; green and gold 
‘ decoration ; gilt lined. 


165—Pair BOTTLE VASES. 


Crown Derby ; f embossed decoration of floral 
designs in gold matte and colors on rose-pink 
ground. ; 


166—PairR DRESDEN CovERED’ “TAsts) 


Tall ovoid shape on solid pedestals ; ‘cupids 


"garlands of flowers modelled i in relief. 


fer aise CxoUr: 


f. ‘ Ses ‘ 3 oti 
pha The Toilet ; ” four sinely’s modelled aieteae ; 3 a 
highly decorated and ornamented with intricate vo 


lace-work. 
me tear Ls ae “Height, 9 inches ; length, 12 inches. rf 


‘ 


168—Pair DRESDEN STATUETTES, 97 9 (141 


Finely modelled and decorated ; ornamentation 


of fine lace-work. | 
_ Height, 13 inches each. 


169—ANTIQUE PLAQUE. eee 


Italian, sixteenth century ; red medallion with a ae 
yellow border; incised ornamentation of figures Pee 
and other designs. ie 3 un meas 
Diameter, 12 inches. . aes 


/t ear ‘ sae 7 , ~ pes 
is hee 


170 ANTIOUE Majouica PLAQue. Sy See 


4 


Bold relief ornamentation, “ Madonna,’ _enam- 
_elled i in are Bes yellow, and white. 3 +e 


- * . 


‘Diameter, ‘2 inches. 


y 


171—BRONZE JAR. 


Japanese; birds. and other designs modelled in 
relief ; brass mountings. a ‘ 


‘Height, 16 inches; diameter, 12 inches. 


FRENCH ‘LAMPS, 


fe  Tarquoise blue- “vases, with finely. wrought 


way 
iy 


- ormolu mountings ; ; arranged for electricity. 
+Made by Victor Rénon, Paris. | 


ss anes eh Bk Height, 24 inches ; diameter, 10 ) inches. 


ha Rs | dows : 5 Sn et 


Pauesiched brass ; ; low form, 
ei 


174—Patr EMPIRE ‘CANDLESTICKS. 


Bronze and gilt ; ‘Egyptian TEN supports ; 


ehiccied ornamentation. 
{ 


-  -175—PatrR EmpirE CANDLESTICKS. 


_ Bronze and gilt; chiseled ornamentation ; low 


‘ 


form. 


176—SMALL PITCHER VASE. 


Royal Dresden ; pastoral Omer painted in rs 
medallion ; pink glaze with gold matte. , | wa 
177—SMALL VASE. | 
Crown Derby; ovoid shape; salmon pink 

A decoration in applied gold and enamels, ~ 


-178—SEVRES oes 


Cylindrical shape; peacock blue cae with eae 
Lan bands at top and: bottom in brown and gold. | 


_179—SEVRES COUPE. 


<e Bowl ‘design; rosé’ pink glaze, mounted in 
Py onmolurgitey 0 os 1. 


180—PAIR SMALL STATUETTES. — OMG os eae an 


Old Crown Ree oe Science and “History.” 


4 = 


181-—Cups AND SAUCERS. _ ue eos 
Old Japanese porcelain; hexagonal shape; fine 
_ blue decoration, Set of twelve, 


182—COVERED JAR. 


Old Delft ; figures « and other cenane painted in 


blue. 


183—CYLINDRICAL VASE. 


Sévres porcelain ; yellow glaze; slight gold 
band ; mark of factory, 1877. 


Height, 73 ‘inches ‘ diameter, 5 inches. 


184—Skvres VASE. 2 Oe 


‘Cylindrical shape, flaring at neck; ose du 
Barry glaze; gilt metal rim at base; mark of 
factory, 1889. 


Height, 14 inches ; diameter, 6 inches. 


185—-SEVRES VASE, 


Similar shape to the above; rose-pink glaze 
with neat decoration in gold; mounted on gilt 
metal low pedestal. 


Height, 15 inches ; diameter, 6 inches, 


186—GLADIATOR’S BELT. 
+= Antique Persian leather, with ‘fine metal orna- 
mentation and profusely incrusted with carnelian, 


ED ORT Rei WAN hoe Wee eR A 


che ceneglatg de la cata te Francaise, | 


Phot tie te Pads of the First Empite; : 
carved wood gilt frame. 


186— —TALL, CANDLESTICK,, 


he s - . ‘ 
hrs Antique ace silver. 


ne 


- 190—ALTAR CANDLESTICK. Pa 0Tag ae 
Antique repoussé silver. 
ers es ers ">": Height, 4o inches. 


en ie 


pe a1 Empire JARDINTERE, 


_ Giit metal ; : aay jake on low feet; relief and 


r 


~ , ’ 


Birecled ornamentation. De FSA 


- Height, 4 inches ; diameter, 12 inches. 


‘ Ey oat a 
ar ae ees 


192—FRENCH MANTEL CLOCK. Eo Sheds 


- First Empire ; gilt“ metal, with group of “ Arts Wee 


and Science,” and bas-relief. 


: 193— EMPIRE MANTEL. ;CLOCK,»; ah 

; ‘ Gilt metal ;: elaborately, bile group and _bas- a 
relief ; “Cupid Surprised;”’ sun and moon Pi 

; phases ; dial’ signed, “ Romain a Paria.” ae a 

194— MANTEL CLOCK. PH RP A OME 5 a 

a Empire; black marble and. vee tall design with ie 

column supports. tonsie  et 


‘a pasos’ a’ 


Gilt metal, with group of “ “Industry and Plenty,” Sk: *s 


and bas-relief. 


196—PaIr EMPIRE CANDELABRA. 


For. two lights each; bronze and cites anciee 


modeled figure supports on high pedestals ; chis- 


Ss ‘. ¢ hide! 
eled ornamentation. . we ee 


Height, 17 inches. . 


197—ROMAN BRONZE VASE. 


Pitcher design; finely modeled figure forming 
handle ; malachite green patina, | fe 
Height, 6 inches. 


. « 


198—Louts RIV." Cloce* SET tenes eee a 


Ormolu and Bleu du Rot enamel; Rhinestone 


ornamentation. Comprises a clock of lyre design ee ae 
and pair of four-light candelabra with branches of ny ae 


floral designs ; maker, “ Festeau le Jenne,” Paris. 


Sean? 


-I99—MANTEL CLOCK, 


First Empire; gilt metal; tall column design with. 
chiseled and relief ornaments. Signed “ Parod © 
Fils a Vierzon.” | | 


‘200—EMPIRE CENTER Price. 


Gilt metal; eM ia pesca aesige on tall ped- ses 
estal, with groups of three’ apie rand 
chiseled ornamentation. 


Height, 17 inches ; diameter, 9 inches. 


' ht ie 


Height, 2 24 inches. 


 Rege at 


Tall cen design i in sate bronze, and gilt, 


bcs * “for four ants. 5. i. 
a. “Height, 31 inches. ony 


a). - Ormolu ‘Sat for six ones: 
ees ' Height, 28 inches. 


uae 7 ‘ _ 


yi ah 
j 


204—BUREAU SET 


. sian . Antique ; comprises three crystal glass toilet bot- 
-.— tles mounted in repoussé and open-work silver, 


is 205—ROMAN BRONZE STATUETTE. | 
. Reproduction of antique. “ Youth extracting a 
thorn from left foot.” ey - 


206 BRONZE RHYTON. d 3 

~ Roman ; reproduction of antique ; gis ‘of x 

: ‘ram’s head. . a bI2 4 ‘ 
207 ROMAN BRONZE STATUETTE, My 
Subject, : Mercury. a 
208—ROMAN BRONZE PITCHER. ia 
Reproduction of antique ; green patina. 3 

209—Pair RoMAN Bronze Busts. i 


Reproduction of antiques ; green patina. 


ete A > 
“7. - 


210—BronzE Door. HANDLE... ! op yn ave 


Antique; finely. wrought, relief 
_ ornamentation. 


211—RomaNn BRONZE. STATUETTE. 


~ 


Subject, “Hercules ; ;” fine green patina, 


Height, 3 14 inches ; diameter, 6 Re Fh vane 


scam ea Roman. LaMpP. : 


ete on ‘ithatae one pe <hr 
| - Height, 27 inches. 
213—PARLOR LAMP. 
Old Sheffield ; vase design. 
214—ANTIQUE LACE-Box. 
_ Venetian ; painted decoration. 
2ts—Pair AuSTERLITZ DRUMS. 


Decorated in bright colors, 


216—ANTIQUE BAS-RELIEF. 


Italian, sixteenth century ; ; “Saint Sebastian.” 


217—ANTIQUE JEWEL CASKET. 
? 
4 Italian ; finely carved dark wood, Roman bronze; He 
‘if - “Lion Couchant ” for top ornament. 


oe 218—MAJOLICA VASE. 

| | Ny Scallop top, scroll handles; decorated with — 
ae ijandscape and sporting scene in fine colors. 

| , 


Height, 14 inches ; diameter, 12 inches. 


“and enameled i in fine green and other: oon! 


Height, 18 inches ; diameter, 13 inches. ie) 


AR 


Ttalian, sixteenth ay 5 ; ovoid shape ; deco- 
_ tated with bold designs of fruits, flowers, and crest 

in finely combined colors, emerald green predomi- 
nating. 


Height, ‘19 inches ; diameter, ie inches. 
a TY COVERED URN. 


Italian; Majolica, finely Mesanived ; anon 
“Adam and Eve driven from the Garden of 
Eden ;” carved wood, gilt mountings. = = =. 


Height, 31 inches ; diameter, 17 inches. 


From the Borghese Palace, Rome. 


_222—Pair LARGE CovyERED Oi Jars ~ } ¥ 


_Italian, sixteenth century; ovoid shape, with 
cherub handles enameled in rich old green ; in- 


scribed us Kece Filippo Boncioli.” | 
Height, 25 inches ; , diameter, Ig inches. he 

223—-BRONZE FIGURE. iene ety s 
Roman ; reproduction of antique. 


Height, 25 inches. 


'224—BRONZE Bust. 


Reproduction of antique. 3 ites 


. 225—-BRONZE Bust. | | 
hac Wes Romans; reprodachom sor antique ; ; fine green ee 
patina ; 3 “Scipio Africanus: the. Elder ; Fe as marble ne 
_ pedestal. hy 


225a—ROMAN BRonzeE Bust. 


’ 


Reproduction of antique 5 ; dat green patina ; shar 


subject, “ Dante.” 


226—ANTIQUE MARBLE eror 
Italian, fifteenth century ; “Wife BF a meniety 
Emperor.” With Venetian pedestal ; ae dec- 


oration. 


227— —PaIR ANTIQUE Busts. 
Sculptured in statuary marble and- porphyry. 
“ Caligula and Claudio.” - 


a 


228—PatrR OAK PEDESTALS, 
Old English ; tall shape, with carved relief orna-_ 
mentation. . 


229—ANTIQUE MajoLica Bust. - 4 7 


re 7 Italian, sixteenth century ;. “‘ Lucretia Borgia ;’ | 
: artistically modeled and enameled in fine colors. — Pans te. 


1 230—Pair OF HEROIC Brae 4 
. Antique Italian Majolica ; ahindoane modeled a 


i and enameled in fine colors; “Eloisa and Alf ra 
1 Deste.* ; Ds peg ae 
i 23I—ELABORATE ANTIQUE JARDENIERE. a 


“Italian, seventeenth century; oval shape; — 
boldly modeled; _ relief ornamentation; en- 
ameled in blue and white ; metal lined. 7 

Length, 36 inches ; width, 30 inches - depth, 16 inches, 


‘ spirits aaa Bthee ornamentation ; ; incised meerip 
tion, “ Fece Lorenzo Montavti.” 


= 


| Hei ht, 29 inches ; diamgeter, 25 frches.. 
g 9 ) 


‘Barly Italian ; ; incised and relief ornamentation ; : 


“mottled green eae 


eer 33 aes ; diameter, 22 inches. 


pie /234—Manatorn O1n Jar, ae 


ee 


Exceedingly rare early. Italian specimen ; boldly 
ei painted decoration of grape vine in bearing, and 
oe coat-of-arms, in yellow and green on cream white 
wae ground; incised and relief ornaments, Dated, 


1620. Me 

Height, 39 inches ; diameter, 32 inches. | ng ‘S 

235—Mammotu Or, Jar. a o 
* 7 eh 

Bese iz 
_Exceedingly rare early Italian specimen ; boldly : os 
painted decoration of fruit vine in bearing, i in yel- ig 


fae 
‘low and green on cream white ground ; incised 1a 
and relief ornaments. x 


iy oe . Height, 38 inches; diameter, 30 inches. 


236—LARGE VASE, 


Doulton ; tall cylindrical shape with globular’ 
+ pody ; decorated with bold floral designs in dark 
blue on white ground. 


Height, 25 inches ; diameter, 15 inches. 


237— LARGE ORIENTAL VASE. sce hs ne a 
Japanese ; ; tall, ovoid shape ; : decorated with ae ae. 
bird, peonies, and bamboo in two shades of blue ; Rares 


mounted in bronze. 


» 


a ae Height, 25 inches ; diameter, 13 inches. 


238—Pair GRAND VASES WITH CovERS. é 
Sévres porcelain ; tall, graceful, ovoid shape, on 
pedestals ; rich Bleu du Rot glaze, with relief and 
gilt ornamentation. 7 


Height, 38 inches ; diameter, 24 inches 
239—LAaRGE VASE. 


Japanese ; tall cylindrical shape; turquoise 
glaze, ornamented in low relief with various 
lacquers. 


Height, 38 inches ; diameter, 18 inches. 


240—PairR MAMMOTH VASES. 


Arita porcelain ; tall ovoid shape with scalloped 
necks ; decoration of birds, pine, bamboo tree, and. 


flowers, in fine blue, | 


Height, 49 inches ; diameter, 20 inches. 
\ | ¥; 241—MARBLE Bust. 

ii Life size; “Don’t You Scratch.” Sculptured 
U __ by A. Garella, Florence, 1887. 

Hi ; 


We 242—PaiR ELABORATE URNS AND PEDESTALS, 

| | -» .< Amarmo stone; carved and highly polished ; 
rt grape vine designs and birds in open-work and 
high relief. | 


EST VESTMENT. 
Ttalian Renaissance ; : ruby velvet, with brocade 


panels and applique. 


eres. Bani XIII.; emerald-green silk velours, — 


trimmed with silver Se Bae thread bands. 


ews dtalian, sixteenth century ; rich satin brocade, — 
with yellow trimmings. 
ee 2453¢—ANTIQUE APPLIQUEs. 


Early Italian; vase | Beans in metallic thread 
and tinsel ; set of four. 


246—Cuasunte. 


Italian Renaissance; elaborate embroidered 


~ and appliqué ornamentation. 


247—PANEL OF TURKISH VELVET. 

Seventeenth century. Sapphire-blue center, bor-_ 
der of ruby red, with designs in white, green, and 
gold. 


Length, 43 inches ; width, 24 inches. 
248—PANEL OF TuRKISH VELVET. ba 1 ‘ 
-- Seventeenth century. Center of rich red, with 
Gesigns and borders in green, white, and yellow. 
Length, 43 inches ; width, 24 inches. 


249—ANTIQUE SCUTARI PANEL. 


Sixteenth century ; | embossed surface, bac , 
ground of ivory’ white, ~ Ovoid medallion | with 
interesting floral designs in rich red and green 5. 


borders and corner ornaments of similar character, — fe 


Length, 47 inches ; width, 25 inches. _ : 


766 -ANTIOUE PANEL OF SATIN AND GoLp. 


; alee urkish, seventeenth century ; brilliant ren 
ground, with bold designs in gold thread and — 
spangles. 


39 inches square. 


251—ANTIQUE PRAYER RuG. 


Rare and exceedingly fine specimen ; center panel 
in two shades of brown, with ‘upper corner in fine 
green ; woven designs in silver thread and red, 
green, and blue silks, surrounded by a wide bor- 


Pees: x der of cream white, and two narrow borders of | 
te sapphire blue, with patterns in red, black, and 

| > t 

Be blue. 


bo Length, 4 feet 9 inches ; width, a feet. 


252—ANTIQUE PERSIAN PANEL. 


Sixteenth century ; alternate medallions in two. 


r shades of red velvet, with elaborate floral pat- 

. | terns in embroidery, appliqués, and insertions, « 
‘ composed of metal thread, and various colors of | 
silks, velvets, and cloths. 


fg . ‘Length, 56 inches ; width, 45 inches. 


253—ARMENIAN PRAYER RuG. 


Seventeenth century ; elaborate floral and other 
designs in needle-work and afpligué on light 
ground ; panel of rich red velvet inserted. 


Length, 74 inches ; width, 46 inches. 


254—GRAND FARNESE PALACE HANGING. 


Velour de Gené of rich red hue ; coat-of-arms of 
the Farnese family in center, and corner ornaments 
and borders in cloth of gold. 


Length, 12 feet 11 inches; width, g feet 11 inches. 


255—GRAND ANTIQUE FLEMISH TAPESTRY. 


An exceedingly fine specimen of the seventeenth 
century ; subject, “Clovis I. at Tours receiving 
ambassadors from Anatasius, Emperor of the East, 


who gave him the titles of patrician and consul.” 


Height, 10 feet 8 inches ; length, 15 feet 6 inches. 


S A L Bo 
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY Bi 


AT EU AMERICAN ART GALLERIES - 


tear. his a eee eee 


BEGINNING PROMPTLY AT THREE orcrgeee 


5 . : ole 
WPL tee Pe ' ot 


ORIENTAL RUGS AND CARPETS 


256—ANTIQUE LADIK. 


Center panel of reddish brown, and border in old 
red ; patterns in subdued colors ; silky texture. . 


Length, 6 feet 9 inches ; width, 3 feet 10 inches. 


257—ANTIQUE DAGHESTAN Lone Rua, 


Center panel of dark blue, with borders of red, 
yellow, and turquoise blue ; diamond and star pat- ite re 
terns in bright colors. 3 


Length, 8 feet 9 inches; width, 3 feet 10 inches. 


enter pan el afi rich dark brown, with wide border 


. red, and n narrow w borders of white, dark blue, and 


. Antique Dacuesray, 


Dark blue center. panel, with borders and bold 


designs i in various colors. 
Length, 8 feet 10 chen width, 3 feet 5 inches. 


yes 260—ANTiQuE CAMEL'S Harr Lone Rue. 


We : Genter panel of diamond-shape medallions, and — Re 

: various designs in pink, blue, black, and other pet 

tants | oe 

Length, 12 feet It inches : width, 3 feet 2 inches. ‘ 

261—ANTIQUE DAGHESTAN. P 

. Black center panel, with turquoise- blue medal- . . 

C De 

oF lion and corners ; floral patterns in various colors. oe 

Length, 4 feet 7 inches; width, 3 feet 2 inches. ei 

262—ANTIQUE BOKHARA. “fh 4 

Old red center panel, surrounded by border in a 

rf 2a core 2 >. ‘ ste 7 § 

es dark ‘blue ; floral‘and other patterns in fine combi- ; 
nation of colors; rich sheen. 9» > 


‘Length, § feét'g inches ; width, 3 feet 2 inches. 


26 seiahbis Kur. 


Center panel of solid red, with patterns at ne 
and bottom, on white and light red ground ; wide 
blue border, with narrow ones in various colors. 


Length, 5 feet 10 inches ; ; width, 3 feet 7 inches. 


264—ANTIQUE BERGAMA. 


ro: 


Center medallion of cream white, surrounded by 
sapphire blue ; ; borders of golden yellow and white ; 
bold patterns in reds, blue, and other colors. 


Length, 6 feet 4 inches ; es 4 feet 10 inches. 


265— ANTIQUE DAGHESTAN Lone Rue. 


Center panel of dark blue, mi medallions in 

: red, white, yellow, and green ; borders of red and 

white, with various designs in finely combined 
colors. SiG cua ae 


Length, 11 feet 4 inches; width, 3 feet 9 inches. . 


266—ANTIQUE Camen’s: Harr Lone Rus. 


Fine combination of patterns in rare colors; 


heavy pile and fine sheen. 


7 


‘Length, 13 feet 6 inches ; width, 3 feet 5 inches. 


267—ANTIQUE KIRMAN. ©... i : 
-Rose-color center’ patiel, with medallions of 
various patterns’; black ground wide border, and 
two narrow borders in light blue ; silky texture. 


Length, 9 feet 1 inch; width, 5 feet 2 inches. 


he 
is 


_ Length, x 5 fet ts inches; width, 7 Yet Cee 


2 9- ANTIQUE CASHMERE. 


, 


Center panel of old red, with patterns in yellow, . 
white, and two shades of blue ; wide border of 
_ turquoise blue, ‘and narrow ones of yellow and red. 


Length, 8 feet 9 inches 3 width, 7 feet I inch. 


sac chire:t blue center, with bold designs in fine 


combination of colors ; bordered with red, brown, 
~* © and patterns in various tones; closely woven and « | eal 


ei. bHiCK pile. Pree er 
5 Length, 14 feet 9 inches; width, Io feet. : ze 


ind 
me, 
“y 


- 


; 
i 


_ 271—-GRAND AGRA CARPET., 


Similar to the above in design, colors, and 


quality. 
Length, 15 feet 7 inches ; width, Io feet. 


Pita CUR WALL BRACKETS. 


Florentine carved ‘wood, reat cupid and shell. 


design. 


erkasa cate 


| 993—FioRentine Consoun. 


Antique ; carved and ty cit in relief, 


274—Pair SCONCES. 


Gilt metal; embossed mirrors ; : 


branches to each. 


four: candle + aa 


275—Two ANTIQUE SCONCES. 


Florentine carved and gilt frames of irregular 
Sheps, and leaf design. 


276—Pair FLORENTINE MIRRORS. 
Carved wood gilt frames ; floral and leaf design. 


ing" 


-277—Pair ANTIQUE FRAMES, 


F lorentine carved and gilt ; bold floral pattern. 


278—ANTIQUE MIRROR. 


. a | First Empire; lyre and shell design; carved 
ine and gilt frame. 


| _ Height, 42 inches ; width, 30 inches. 


279—ANTIQUE MIRROR. 


_ Elaborately carved wood gilt frame ; floral de- 
sign, with figure in relief > circular shape beveled 
edge plate. sh 
Height, 66 inches ; width, 36 Scie: 


280—FLORENTINE MIRROR. 


Louis XIV. ; square shape ; carved gilt frame 


of vine and floral design. 


Height, 45 inches; width, 38 inches. 


281—VENETIAN MIRROR. 
Black wood and resoussé frame ; beveled plate. 


Height, 34 inches ; width, 28 inches. 


282—ANTIQUE MIRROR. 


First Empire ; tall narrow shape ; gilt frame with 
bas-relief. 


' Height, 49 inches ; width, 23 inches. 


283—FLORENTINE MIRROR. 


Louis XVI; elaborately carved and gilt frame ; 
top ornament of floral design ; beveled plate. 
Height, 57 inches ; width, 38 inches. 


284—ANTIQUE MIRROR, 


Carved and gilt frame, with floral, fruit, and rope 
design in high relief. 


Height, 44 inches ; width, 34 inches. 


285—ELanorate Manren Mirror. so Ma 


De ouis 26 Fy gilt frame, with rt 


plate, oy ie Cig ee ee Ts 
ne ak ee 65 oe ; aan ‘ex ached 
wis F je igs pee oY ai ore Me 


sae sf ae aes 


tion, ee we el a 


y fi 


287—Empire STANDARD. 


A s Rea ae? She a 


_ Double cous design eitved gilt and enam- : 
eled. 


288—Pair SCONCES, 


Carved and gilt erewee oval shape ; with as .; 


branches for three lights oe 


(289—Pair CONSOLES. 


Italian ; eae XV. Beicde ; claboneae carved 
_and gilt ; Scagliola marble tops. 
Height, 33 inches ; width, 43 inches; depth, 21 inches. 


290—Pair Louis XIV. Conso.es, 


Carved and gilt; Scagliola marble tops. 
Height, 37 inches ; width, 48 inches ; depth, 24 inches. — 


291—Lovuis XVI. CoNsOoLE. | 


Saal 


'.. Carved and gilt ; marble top. 
Height, 37 inches ; width, 34 inches ; depth, 17 inches. 


a, ASE meh 


lorentine carved nad gilt series att finely 


-wro ight ormolu gilt candle branches attached, 


: pe gee. ~ Height, tot feet : width, 54 feet. 
a eS 3 ‘ i ; 


j 


eit __Blaboratly gerved: ornamentation ; ae Sienna 
marble tops. r he 


| Height, 40 inches ; width, oy fhe : fea 28 inches. 


(ve 


| FURNITURE © 


sealed es a : 


294—Low PEpEsrat. 


_ Chinese carved teakwood ; India marble panel 
inserted in top. ; 


Height, 19 inches ; diameter, 13 inches. - ‘ 
 295—TALL PEDESTAL. | i 
& : ' : : $ ij ab 
Chinese carved teakwood ; India marble top. ! 2 
Height, 36 inches ; diameter, 15 inches. | ; | it, 
J ie Y : je Tae -4 . as 
- 296—HALL Skat. ae aie | : 
Chinese teakwood, elaborately carved ; India ee 
pauls panel inserted in top. ; a ‘ 

- _ Height, 18 inches ; diameter, 20 inches. 


297— Hat SEAT. 


Chinese carved teakwood, finished in matural 
color; India marble top. 


- ‘Height, ‘18 inches ; ; diameter, 18 inches. 


4 


298—Lowrs XIV. TABLE, | 


Tulip wood, with . bronze 


brocade top.2:s. "a5 


pete 


299—Tra TABLE, © iy a iN aaa a 
oe 


i 


DM Now 
Spee 
Rosie 


Louis XV.; low form, with tray. -shape fon whic ae oe 


is finely inlaid with various woods ; - bronze mount- 
“ings, — ; 


| goo—CORNER CABINET. 


Louis XIV.; Vernis-Martin ; pastoral subject, , 
finely painted in medallion; gilt-bronze mountings ;. ; ; : 
rose antique marble top. 


30I—ANTIQUE SPANISH SETTLE. 


Carved wood, finished in black ; upholstered in 


old brocade velvet. 


Lf 


302—FRENCH TABLE, 


Carved and gilt ; old-gold silk-plush top. 


PETE RS Se 
we 3a —e* . : >, 


303—Four First Empire CHairs. 


Mahogany and gilt, with meta! ornaments ; 
seats upholstered in é¢ru damask. 


304—OLD ENGLISH “ HOGARTH” CHAIR. 


Carved mahogany; seat upholstered in red 
plush, 


d NTIQUE ARM Cuan. 


ee 


Barly Italian ; ‘carved wood and gilt ; ‘seats and 


see's, 
are 


: “backs eoneiered in -ruby-color velvet, with ap- 


* 


uit nee’ oh i ayy : oe 


dae XVL ; : carved and gilt ; : cane seat and 


ee Fo 


end ee old silk-brocade cushions. 


Carved and gilt ; 


my 


old-rose plush top, 


“308 ANTIQUE CENTER TABLE. 


‘Mahogany ; circular top on column support ; 


Ase TH. Sy 


" G09—Frencu RECEPTION CHAIR. 


Satinwood, finely inlaid with various woods and 
mother-of-pearl ; seat upholstered in needle-work 
on light color silk. 
. Y 
isos aed ooT STOOL, 


Louis XIV. design; carved and gilt ; upholstered 
in silk brocade. 


gi1—Lovs XVI. Cuarr. i eae 7 ? . 
Carved and gilt ; upholstered in old rose and 


white stripe brocade of floral design. 


312—Louis XIV. TABLE. 


Tulip wood ; bronze mountings. 


3 I meer bie XVI. Chine: 


Antique, high back, ‘Maborately cared na gil 
upholstered in Falla silk flowered brocade. 


3 eedepmaits TALL ae ts 


~ 


Louis XVI. ; elaborately. carved with « ram heads ro 


and other designs in bold relief. 


Height, 52 inches o diameter, 20 inches. 


ieee NEIGUE ARM CHAIR, 


Italian ; carved ; ; “upholstered i in leather ai larce 
gilt naiis. 


316—ANTIQUE ARM CHAIR. 
Similar to the above. 


317—VERNIS-MARTIN CABINET. 


_ Louis XIV.; finely painted pastoral subject on 
panel of door ; bronze mountings ; marble top. 


318—FIRE SCREEN, 
Louis XV. ; carved wood and gilt frame; heavy 


_ beveled glass panel. 
Height, 45 inches ; , ‘width, 34 inches. 


319—FOLDING SCREEN. 


Lou:s XVI.; carved and gold lacquered ; tall 
form; three folds ; with upper panels finely deco- 
rated by Mesle ; lower panels of old French bro- 

— cade, 


Height, 5 feet 3 inches. 


» - ; 
LP Le ioe ar ca . ‘ei 
Sa = Wee, p30 


she ; frames elaborately carved and gilt 
2 panels 0 of alien and appliqué. = 


eight, 50 inches; width, 22 gnebce 


SF as 
tf 
4 


s 


sf a i ak Carved | oad gilt; “upholstered i in ea pink a and 


- floral brocade. 


Carved and gilt ; upholstered i in rich cue brocade ; 


io es _ floral designs on light colored ground, — i 


_ 323—Larce ANTIQUE ARM CHaIR.. 


Italian ; carved walnut ; upholstered. in rich silk 


and facol brocade. 


-324—ANTIQUE SIDE TABLE. 
Italian Renaissance ; finely inlaid with various — 
woods: | | 7 


=% 


(325—PairR ANTIQUE SCREENS. 


as Elaborately carved and gilt; two’ folds each; | ee 
panels of old red figured satin damask. 
Height, 5 feet. 


-; 
gree t ~.- 


326—ANTIQUE uh Curar, 


aes. Spanish: eee and ale: upholstered in red 
silk damask and appliqué. 


ale | 


-328—Larce ANTIQUE ARM CHAIR. 


= 


- Italian ; covered in crimson earn daniel Said - 
to have belonged to one of the Doges. | 


329—LaARGE ARM CHAIR. 


Antique ; similar to the above. 


330-—LARGE ANTIQUE ARM Cua. Penh fs 


Italian; carved, and with gilt ornaments ; | 
upholstered in old’ satin damask, 


331—EMPIRE WORK STAND. 


Mahogany, with gilt metal ornaments ; claw feet. 


33 2-—EMPIRE Dressine TABLE. 


Mahogany ; elaborately ornamented wie gilt rhs 
metal ; ; swinging mirror. | 


Height, 69 inches ; width, 36 inches ; depth, 23 inches. 


333—EMPIRE PIER TABLE. 
i 

| | mes Mahogany, with gilt and inlaid ornamentation, 
ie gilt metal claw feet. 
be Height, 33 inches ; width, 39 inches ; depth, 20 inches. 

| 


334—EmPIRE NIGHT STAND, ° 


Pa | Mahogany, with gilt ornaments ; marble top. 


S 335—DRESSING STAND. 


First Empire; mahogany, with finely wrought 
~ metal ornaments, 


336—CONSOLE. 
First Empire ; rosewood, with marble. columns 
and pilasters ; gilt metal ornaments; marble top, 
and mirror back. 


Height, 36 inches; width, 42 inches; depth, 17 inches, 


337—EMPIRE SECRETARY. 


Mahogany, with gilt metal ornaments ; marble 
top. 
Height, 55 inches ; width, 40 inches ; depth, 18 inches, 


338—EMPIRE DRESSING STAND. 


Mahogany, with gilt metal ornaments and candle 
branches ; swinging mirror, and white marble top. 


Height, 60 inches ; width, 28inches ; depth, 18 inches. 


From Fontainebleau, 


339 ANTIQUE CHEVAL GLASS. 


Louis XIV.; French walnut; gilt metal orna- 


ments. 
Height, 80inches ; width, 34 inches. 


— 340—EMPIRE BUREAU. 


etatocaa with ahs Sietatt ornaments ; a ; marble. 
top. 


34r—Finst Empire DRAWING- Room Sure, 


Mahogany, with gilt meta! ornament ; ‘uphol- 
-stered in silk tapestry, floral. medallions on green 


he 7 


ground ; comprises high-back sofa, two aring: aes 


ye + 


oT a 


“chairs, and six wall chairs. 


neta ae 


Louis XVI. : ares and gilt. 


34 au OAT BRAZIER. 


"Spanish ; burnished Grasse open- -work and re- te 
ess ornamentation ; has large plateau, Pe oa ae 


: : ae 


344—ESCRETOIRE. 


Louis XVI. ; brass moulding, inlays, and orna- ‘ ie 
“ments ; : beveled glass door and mirror; rosean- i 
- tique marble ore 


345—MARQUETRY CHEVAL GLASS. 


Height, 64 inches; width, 31 inches. 


gee OUe CHEVAL GLASS. 
| Chippendale ; mahogany, Geet inlaid with va- 
oo, ‘Yous ‘woods; beveled: mirror. 


Height, 76 inches ; width, 28 inches. 


347—RIcH CABINET. 


Italian ; elaborately carved and gilt ; glass front 
and sides. 


Height, 63 inches ; width, 51 inches ; depth, 21 inches. 


348—Louis XVI. Sora. 


Carved and gilt; upholstered in fine silk bro- 
cade, 


349—Lovis XVI, DRawinc-Room SUITE. 


Antique, carved and gilt ; upholstered in very 
fine Beauvais tapestry ; comprises large sofa, mar- 


quise, two arm chairs, two reception chairs, 


350—Lovis XIV. DrawinG-Room SUITE. 


Carved and gilt; upholstered in rich satin bro- 
cade; floral designs on écru ground ; comprises 
one marquise, four arm chairs, and seven wall 


- 


chairs. 


From the collection of the Earl of Craven. 


351—Lovis XVI. DRAwinc-Room SUITE, 


Antique; carved and gilt; covered in red 
figured satin damask ; comprises large high-back 


sofa and six wall chairs. 


Seges fst ak Rend mirror back. 


353—ANTIQUE WEDDING CHEST. 


Pee a hale Early Italian : front mas anu painted ed 


Gozzoli ; top carved and gilt. 


Height: 25 inches; length, 56 inches ; depth, 24 inches. — ; % 


354—Lovis XIV. CaBINET. 


Antique; tall form; ebony finish; gilt metal hak 


mountings ; glass in doors, 


$45 
Height, 62 inches ; width, 36 inches; depth, 14 inches. © 


355—ROYAL CRADLE, 


Italian antique; elaborately carved, gilt and 


enameled. 


356—TALL CLOcK. 


Louis XV.; Boule and gilt-bronze ornamentation. 


SST aa OUR SCREEN, 


Spanish leather ; oe decorated with foie 
subjects and other designs ; tall form; four folds. 


H cone 7 feet. 


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5 Beings Spanish heater ; decorated with pas- 
toral and floral subjects ; three folds. 


Height, 7 feet. 


> 


uz 359-01 SPANISH Ostonc PANnELs. 


; Embossed and painted leather ; ; religious subjects 
and floral design ; set of three. 


Size of each : length, 83 inches ; height, 38 inches. 


- 360-—OLD SPANISH OBLONG PANEL. 


_ Embossed and painted on leather ; religious 
and floral subjects. 


- ’ Length, 79 inches; height, 37 inches. : ; 


361—LarGE VENETIAN SECRETARY Book Case. 


Sixteenth century ; profusely decorated with 
historical subjects and other designs. 


Height, 90 inches ; width, 44 inches; depth, 23 inches. ee 


362—LARGE CHIPPENDALE CABINET, 
Richly finished in mahogany; ball and claw ! 
feet. ; 
Height, 84 feet ; width, 6 feet; depth, 14 feet. 


| ia a ANTIQUE ELABORATE COLUMNS. 


x Italian ; sixteenth century ; green ground, ati 
. grape vine in bearing, carved in relief and gilt ; 
capitals of bold leaf design, carved and gilt. 

Height, 114 feet. 


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| / 7 is Seat s et x 
Era Length, anes 


THomas E. KIRBY, 


A uctioneer. 


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